The Command line field support some special internal commands.
| *<external program> | Start a external program as administrator, Eg "*cmd" starts a admin prompt at current path | 
| !<cmd / path> | Normally Multi Commander will go to a path if it is enterd, Typing ! infront of the path will force the path/cmd to be opened by Windows Shell | 
| cd <path> | Change directory | 
| mkdir <path> | Create Folder | 
| cf <file> | Create a new empty file | 
| alias <name>=<expanded to> | Create a new alias, eg "alias d=d:\bin" | 
| alias2 <name> | Create a new alias for current path, eg "alias2 d" | 
| topmost 1 | Change Multi Commander from being a always ontop. Use 1 to enable, else it will disable it | 
| addlanguage | Used to add support for another language so that you can create new translations | 
| importcmd | Used to import a script command fast. | 
| dbg folog | Enable full file operations logging | 
| dbg fslog | Enable full file system logging | 
| dbg applog | Enable fullapplication logging | 
| :save | Save all autoload settings for all tabs. Same save that is done before exit. | 
| :showhidden | Change the settings to show all system and hidden files | 
| :hidehidden | Change the settings to hide all system and hidden files | 
| :goapp | Go to the path where Multi Commander is started from | 
| :userdata | Go to the path under the user account where Multi Commander saves data | 
| :gomcreg | Go to the path in registry used by Multi Commander | 
| :golog | Go to the path where Multi Commander stored the log files | 
| :goconfig | Go to the path where Multi Commander read/write the settings files. | 
Since v2.7 the following is also available
| :box | Go to the location where you have your DropBox folder. (If you have DropBox installed) | 
| :sky | Go to the location where you have your SkyDrive folder. (If you have SkyDrive installed) | 
| :desk | Go to the desktop | 
| :dl | Go to the Windows Download folder (No available on Windows XP/2003) | 
| :ctc | Clear Thumbnail Cache - Will remove all thumbnail cache information stored in memory |