Basic Concepts
There are a number of concepts in Opus that may be different from other file 
managers you have used. While we try to avoid the use of jargon or geeky 
terminology there are some terms used in this help file that you may not be that 
familiar with; we suggest having a quick flip through the Basic Concepts section 
to familiarize yourself with some of these concepts.
  - The Lister: 
  Listers are what you might call the Opus "main window" - in a traditional file 
  manager, they would be the main window. Listers (the name is historic) contain 
  file displays (where the contents of directories are shown), folder trees 
  (presents your file system as a tree structure for easy navigation), toolbars, 
  and various optional "panes" like the viewer pane, the metadata pane, etc. You 
  can open as many Listers as you like. 
  
 - Explorer 
  Replacement: Opus has the option to operate in Explorer 
  Replacement mode. In this mode, most actions that normally result in the 
  opening of an Explorer window (pressing the Windows+E key, double-clicking on 
  an icon on the desktop, etc.) will instead open an Opus Lister. This is the 
  mode we recommend you run in. 
  
 - Source and 
  Destination: As well as the traditional copy/cut/paste method of 
  file management you're probably used to, Opus provides an alternative method 
  that uses the concept of "source" and "destination" folders. Instead of 
  browsing to the files you want to copy, copying them to the clipboard, then 
  browsing to the destination folder and pasting them in, this alternate method 
  lets you display both the source and destination folders at the same time 
  (either using two separate Listers, or with a single Lister in dual file 
  display mode) and copy files from one to the other in a single action. 
  
 - Selecting 
  Files: There are a number of ways to select files for operations; 
  other than the standard methods using the keyboard or mouse, you can select 
  using a wildcard match on the filename, or use a filter to select files by 
  attributes or metadata. Opus also supports a checkbox mode which lets you 
  manipulate files (by double-clicking or drag-and-drop) without affecting their 
  selection state. 
  
 - Searching 
  and Filtering: Searching is the process of locating files or 
  folders that may not be in the currently viewed location - Opus supports 
  Windows Search for indexed search, as well as its own powerful search engine 
  that lets you build complex queries to find files based on attributes and 
  metadata as well as filenames. Filtering is the process of hiding, or masking 
  out, files and folders from the currently viewed location. Opus provides a 
  number of ways to do this - the easiest to use is the Filter Bar, which lets 
  you quickly show a sub-set of files by simply typing a wildcard pattern into 
  the file display. 
  
 - Sorting and 
  Grouping: The file list can be sorted by a single field or by 
  multiple fields, and you can also group the file list by any field 
  with collapsible groups. 
  
 - Folder 
  Options: This is a powerful system that lets you control exactly 
  how your folders will appear - you can define the view mode, sorting and 
  grouping options, etc, and permanently assign them to a folder, a folder 
  and its children, a "type" of folder (based either on the disk type or 
  the contents of the folder), or multiple folders using wildcards.  
  
 - Flat View: 
  The Flat View system lets you "collapse" the contents of all the child folders 
  of the current location, and make them appear as if they are all in the same 
  physical location. Flat View can show a truely flat list of all sub-folders, 
  or it can display the contents of sub-folders in a hierarchical structure. 
  
 - Virtual File 
  System: The real file-system is where you store your files and 
  folders - generally contained on your hard drives, USB drives, etc. The 
  virtual file-system is a concept that Opus uses to describe file-systems that 
  aren't stored in this traditional manner. For example, File 
  Collections are a virtual file-system because they are a collection of 
  files stored on traditional media, rather than the underlying folders 
  themselves. There are a number of concepts that are specific to particular 
  virtual file systems - File Collections, Libraries, Archives and FTP are all 
  described in this section.