

The dialog prompting whether TreeSize Free should be restarted as administrator if a folder could not be accessed during the scan is now also operable via keyboard if TreeSize Free was started from the Windows Explorer context menu.Selected items in selected subfolders are no longer counted twice. The display of selected elements in the status bar has been improved.An error when closing the preview window for the folder content via the escape key became fixed.The display on high-resolution screens has been improved.If multiple elements are selected in the directory tree during a PDF export, exactly the selected elements are now exported as a list.For these outdated operating systems, V4.4 remains available for download on our homepage. The support for Windows Vista and Windows 7, as well as Windows Server 2008 and Windows Server 2008 R2 has been discontinued with this release.The behavior when switching to Windows tablet mode is now nearly identical to Windows 10 Explorer.

Instead, TreeSize Free uses the classic UI now and resizes the icons and fonts. The previous touch interface in Metro look has been removed.The space, which is wasted by the file system can be displayed and the results can be printed in a report. Scanning is done in a thread, so you can already see results while TreeSize is working.

Each folder can be expanded in Explorer-like style to see the size of its subfolders.

TreeSize Free can be started from the context menu of a folder or drive and shows you the size of this folder, including its subfolders. TreeSize Free tells you where precious space has gone to. Every hard disk is too small if you just wait long enough.
