When discussing an “Uninstaller” in the context of Total Commander, it usually refers to one of two things: the native utility used to remove Total Commander itself, or popular third-party file system plugins designed to let you manage Windows program uninstallations directly within Total Commander’s interface. 1. The Native Tool (tcuninst.exe)
Total Commander includes its own built-in utility called tcuninst.exe to completely remove or repair the application.
Location: It is stored directly in the Total Commander installation directory (usually C:\Program Files\totalcmd</code>).
Standard Execution: You can run it by double-clicking the file or by navigating to the Windows Apps & Features / Control Panel.
Silent Mode: For system administrators deployment, it supports command-line switches for silent operation. Running %ProgramFiles%\totalcmd\tcuninst.exe /7 will trigger a silent uninstallation without user prompts.
Data Retention: By design, the default uninstaller removes the main application files but leaves user-created configuration settings (wincmd.ini), license keys (wincmd.key), and custom plugins intact so you do not lose data if you decide to reinstall later.
2. The File System Plugins (Windows Add/Remove Replacements)
If you want to manage other Windows applications using Total Commander, developers have created File System (WFX) plugins. These plugins integrate directly into Total Commander’s “Network Neighborhood” panel, allowing you to uninstall external software much faster than the default Windows Control Panel. Uninstaller64 (Modern)
The primary current choice for modern systems is Uninstaller64 1.0.1 - Total Commander. It was developed as a modern replacement for legacy tools.
Question about uninstalling TC - Total Commander - ghisler.ch
Leave a Reply