PowerToys is a set of utilities for power users to tune and streamline their Windows experience for greater productivity.
Inspired by the Windows 95 era PowerToys project, this reboot provides power users with ways to squeeze more efficiency out of the Windows 10 shell and customize it for individual workflows. A great overview of the Windows 95 PowerToys can be found here.
The first preview of these utilities can be installed from here.
The first preview release of the PowerToys utilities and source code is now live! This release includes two preview quality utilities as well as the tools and docs to make it easy to create new PowerToys utilities.
- FancyZones - FancyZones is a window manager that makes it easy to create complex window layouts and quickly position windows into those layouts. The FancyZones backlog can be found here
- Windows key shortcut guide - The shortcut guide appears when a user holds the Windows key down for more than one second and shows the available shortcuts for the current state of the desktop. The shortcut guide backlog can be found here
Additional utilities in the pipeline are:
- Maximize to new desktop widget - The MTND widget shows a pop-up button when a user hovers over the maximize / restore button on any window. Clicking it creates a new desktop, sends the app to that desktop and maximizes the app on the new desktop.
- Process terminate tool
- Batch file renamer
- Animated gif screen recorder
The full backlog of utilities can be found here
The latest release of PowerToys can be downloaded from https://github.com/microsoft/PowerToys/releases
Click on Assets
to show the files available in the release and then click on PowerToysSetup.msi
to download the PowerToys installer.
PDB symbols for the release are available in a separate zip file PDB symbols.zip
.
- Windows 10 1803 (build 10.0.17134.0) or above to build and run PowerToys.
- Visual Studio 2019 Community edition or higher, with the 'Desktop Development with C++' component and the Windows 10 SDK version 10.0.18362.0 or higher.
- Open
powertoys.sln
in Visual Studio, in theSolutions Configuration
drop-down menu selectRelease
orDebug
, from theBuild
menu chooseBuild Solution
. - The PowerToys binaries will be in your repo under
x64\Release
. - If you want to copy the
PowerToys.exe
binary to a different location, you'll also need to copy themodules
and thesvgs
folders.
- Install the WiX Toolset Visual Studio 2019 Extension.
- Install the WiX Toolset build tools.
- From the
installer
folder openPowerToysSetup.sln
in Visual Studio, in theSolutions Configuration
drop-down menu selectRelease
orDebug
, from theBuild
menu chooseBuild Solution
. - The resulting
PowerToysSetup.msi
installer will be available in theinstaller\PowerToysSetup\x64\Release\
folder.
The following configuration issue only applies if the user is a member of the Administrators group.
Some PowerToys modules require being run with the highest permission level if the current user is a member of the Administrators group. The highest permission level is required to be able to perform some actions when an elevated application (e.g. Task Manager) is in the foreground or is the target of an action. Without elevated privileges some PowerToys modules will still work but with some limitations:
- the
FancyZones
module will be not be able to move an elevated window to a zone. - the
Shortcut Guide
module will not appear if the foreground window belongs to an elevated application.
To run and debug PowerToys from Visual Studio when the user is a member of the Administrators group, Visual Studio has to be started with elevated privileges. If you want to avoid running Visual Studio with elevated privileges and don't mind the limitations described above, you can do the following: open the runner
project properties and navigate to the Linker -> Manifest File
settings, edit the UAC Execution Level
property and change it from highestAvailable (/level='highestAvailable')
to asInvoker (/level='asInvoker')
, save the changes.
See the instructions on how to install the PowerToys Module project template.
Specifications for the PowerToys settings API.
Please review these brief docs below relating to our coding standards etc.
👉 If you find something missing from these docs, feel free to contribute to any of our documentation files anywhere in the repository (or make some new ones!)
This is a work in progress as we learn what we'll need to provide people in order to be effective contributors to our project.
This project welcomes contributions and suggestions and we are excited to work with the power user community to build a set of tools for helping you get the most out of Windows.
We ask that before you start work on a feature that you would like to contribute, please read our Contributor's Guide. We will be happy to work with you to figure out the best approach, provide guidance and mentorship throughout feature development, and help avoid any wasted or duplicate effort.
⚠ Note: PowerToys is still a nascent project and the team is actively working out of this repository. We will be periodically re-structuring the code to make it easier to comprehend, navigate, build, test, and contribute to, so DO expect significant changes to code layout on a regular basis.
⚠ License Info: Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.microsoft.com.
When you submit a pull request, a CLA-bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., label, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct.
For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact [email protected] with any additional questions or comments.