PCWorld (USA)

Powertoys now tells you which app is blocking file deletion

The File Locksmith tool gives you a list of active programs accessing the file and a quick way to shut them down.

- BY MICHAEL CRIDER

How often have you been in the middle of clearing off your desktop by deleting a bunch of unused files, only for Windows to tell you it’s in use by another program?

Except that Windows often doesn’t tell you which program is using it, so you shrug like John Travolta in that one Pulp Fiction scene. The latest addition to the immanently useful Powertoys collection can fix that problem.

The File Locksmith tool is available in the latest version of the program, 0.64.0 ( fave.co/ 3UT6RSH).

Using the tool is super easy. In Windows Explorer, right-click the file that’s obstinatel­y refusing to be deleted (or in use in any other way), then click “What’s using this file?” The File Locksmith tool will then give you a list of executable­s that are actively accessing the file, including handy info on the process ID and user. You also get a quick “End task” button, so you don’t have to dive into the Task Manager to tell the program to buzz off.

Microsoft’s Powertoys is quickly becoming a must-have addition ( fave. CO/3OOQQKX) for just about any

Windows user. The new addition was spotted by Bleepingco­mputer ( fave.co/3uqgqn4), but it’s only the latest in a growing collection of super-small, super-useful little tools in the collection. It’s the seventh new addition to the collection just this year, including an optical character recognitio­n tool ( fave.co/ 3Urzcux), a quick way to add accented characters, and a quick way to capture GIFS ( fave.co/3fxiw3v).

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 ?? ?? Another useful Powertoys tool is Text Extractor, which lets you highlight an area of an image and copy the text inside it.
Another useful Powertoys tool is Text Extractor, which lets you highlight an area of an image and copy the text inside it.
 ?? ?? In Windows Explorer, rightclick the file that’s refusing to be deleted, then click “What’s using this file?”
In Windows Explorer, rightclick the file that’s refusing to be deleted, then click “What’s using this file?”

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