>>903252>Sorry, but I would be very careful hexediting explorer.exe to bypass its input validation on windows 10.FTFY
>>903279>It saves space on the taskbar but still make programs accessible and it makes switching to programs quicker.How can this possibly work? Are you just *remembering* which document is in which notepad?
I strongly recommend you just learn to work the default settings or "always combine". They're the default for a reason, and that reason is that they work. At the risk of sounding like an oldfag here, I've been through this process with Windows 95, then again with 2000, then again with 7, then once again with 10. All the parts of an operating system are designed to work together, so you're just making pain and misery for yourself if you try to force one specific part to work in a way that doesn't work together with the rest of the OS, just because it's what you're used to.
I used to run the taskbar on always-combine, always show titles, auto-hide, as wide as it goes, and on the LHS of the screen. Then Windows 7 stopped me doing that, because it would hide the titles when it combined, which defeated the purpose of doing it (you can read the whole title, and get the specific window you wanted in two clicks). So I feel your pain, but you know what I did? I got used to how 7 worked, and lo and behold doing things 7's way was faster in 7 because the rest of 7 was designed around doing things 7's way.
My advice to you, OP, is to wholeheartedly embrace 10s UI, and see if you like it (or at least can tolerate it). At the moment you're only seeing downsides, because you're not letting it work the way it needs to to be quick and intuitive. Try to "get" what it's trying to do, and see if that makes you hate it less.
>I will never understand why Microsoft will not implement this natively on WindowsBecause what happens once you have 50+ browser windows open? Your taskbar will look like someone's inventory.