![]() If either is the case, then configure your editor as an external editor for WinSCP and enable preference option External editor opens each file in separate window (process). Some editors do that by default while some offer a configuration option for that (see below). If you want to avoid that, you need to make sure that your editor opens each file in a separate window (process). One drawback of this approach is that all of the files ever edited by the current instance of WinSCP are kept in a temporary directory (until WinSCP is closed). If you choose to edit the same file again during the same session, WinSCP will download it to the same temporary directory as before, allowing the external editor to reload the file content in case it still has it opened (assuming the editor can detect the change). ![]() To allow using this kind of editor, WinSCP does not treat the file as closed when the editor launched to open it is closed. If such an editor is already running and WinSCP runs a second instance to open a new file, then the second instance just notifies the first to open the new file and exits immediately.
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