使您的 Windows 11 看起来像Windows 10需要调整注册表设置和使用第三方工具的组合。幸运的是,您可以选择是否希望所有组件或仅部分组件看起来像Windows 10。
例如,您可能会因为“开始”菜单(Start Menu)看起来更大但显示的项目更少而感到恼火。也许您不喜欢单击“显示更多选项”来获得完整的上下文菜单。
好消息是您可以将所有这些更改为您在Windows 10中所记得的内容。坏消息?Microsoft可能会在未来的(Microsoft)Windows更新中禁用本指南中讨论的一些注册表黑客,因为它确实希望您使用新设计的界面。
在你开始之前
在使用本指南中讨论的任何方法之前,您应该了解以下内容:
- 一些方法涉及调整注册表。
虽然更改本指南中提到的注册表设置是安全的,但删除重要的注册表项或修改它可能会导致重大问题。您应该在开始之前备份您的注册表(back up your registry)。
- StartAllBack 是一个付费工具。
我们在需要的方法中使用StartAllBack作为第三方工具。该工具提供 100 天的试用期,但并非完全免费。如果您正在寻找免费工具,请使用来自 GitHub 的 Open-Shell(Open-Shell from GitHub)。
- 创建还原点。
每当您在Windows(Windows)中更改太多内容时,都会有出错的余地。如果您搞砸了,您总是希望选择撤消更改,因此在执行本指南中的任何调整之前
创建一个还原点。(create a restore point)
如何使Windows 11 开始菜单看起来(Start Menu Look)像Windows 10
开始菜单可能是(Start Menu)Windows 11中最可怕的变化。几十年来,我们一直将光标移动到左下角并左键单击以打开“开始”菜单——(Start Menu —)我可以在睡梦中做到这一点。
突然,Windows希望我们根据您拥有的固定任务栏图标的数量,将光标定位在更靠近中心的位置。更糟糕的是,您会在Windows 11 开始菜单(Start Menu)上看到大量空间浪费。
不过,有一些简单的方法可以解决这个问题。
(Position Start Menu)使用内置调整(Built-In Tweak)将开始菜单置于左侧(Left Using)
Windows仅提供一项内置调整,以使Windows 11 开始菜单(Start Menu)看起来像Windows 10(尽管它确实提供了其他开始菜单自定义选项(Start Menu customization options))。因此,如果您的主要 Windows 11 痛点是开始菜单(Start Menu),您可能需要使用第三方工具。
如果您不习惯安装第三方应用程序,您仍然可以像在Windows 10中一样左对齐(Windows 10)开始菜单(Start Menu):
- 右键单击(Right-click)任务栏并选择任务栏(Taskbar)设置。
- 展开名为任务栏(Taskbar)行为的部分。
- 展开任务栏(Taskbar)对齐旁边的下拉菜单,然后选择居中(Center)。
这会将开始菜单(Start Menu)图标放在屏幕的左下角。
(Redesign Start Menu)使用第三方工具
重新设计开始菜单
如果您想进一步重新设计您的开始菜单(Start Menu),请使用第三方工具,例如StartAllBack。下载 StartAllBack(Downloading StartAllBack)并启动 .exe 将自动将新主题应用到您的计算机。看到应用的更改后:
- 右键单击(Right-click)任务栏并选择属性。
- (Select Kinda 10)从欢迎选项卡中(Welcome)选择 Kinda 10作为主题。
您还可以通过从左侧导航到“开始”菜单选项卡来更改其他“(Start Menu)开始”菜单设置。(Start Menu)但是,这些设置更多是为了改进实用程序,而不是让开始菜单(Start Menu)看起来像Windows 10的开始菜单(Start Menu)。
您仍然看不到磁贴,而且设计看起来更像Windows 7 开始菜单(Start Menu)而不是Windows 10,除了Windows 10徽标作为开始(Start)按钮。
但是,更改开始菜单(Start Menu)可能仍然有意义,因为它不会像Windows 11中的新开始菜单(Start Menu)那样浪费大量屏幕空间。因此,当您应用设置时,您的“开始”菜单(Start Menu)将如下所示:
如何使Windows 11 任务栏看起来(Taskbar Look)像Windows 10
Windows 11 有一些内置的任务栏调整,但您不能仅使用这些调整使任务栏看起来像Windows 10 。您需要使用StartAllBack并进行注册表调整以重新设置新任务栏的样式,使其看起来像Windows 10任务栏。
(Redesign Taskbar)使用第三方工具
重新设计任务栏
如果您喜欢屏幕顶部的任务栏,Windows 11 将不允许这样做。与Windows 10不同,您不能将任务栏放置在底部以外的任何位置。StartAllBack 的任务栏设置可以帮助您重新定位和重新设置任务栏的样式(或者您可以使用TaskbarX 获得更多任务栏修改选项(TaskbarX for more taskbar modification options)):
- 右键单击(Right-click)任务栏并选择属性。
- 从左侧选择任务栏。
- 选择(Select Taskbar)屏幕上的任务栏位置作为顶部(Top)(或您喜欢的任何其他选项)。
现在,您将看到任务栏自动移动到屏幕顶部:
您可能会考虑更改的另一件事是任务栏按钮分组。Windows 10 允许您选择不对任务栏按钮进行分组,但 Windows 11 不提供此类选项。StartAllBack 可以帮助您解决此问题:
- 切换到StartAllBack上的(StartAllBack)任务栏(Taskbar)选项卡。
- 展开组合(Combine)任务栏按钮旁边的下拉菜单,然后选择从不(Never)。
通过注册表(Bring)调整恢复(Registry Tweak)经典任务栏
您可以使用注册表调整切换到Windows 经典任务栏。(Windows Classic)虽然它使任务栏看起来更像Windows 10(部分原因是它还添加了搜索框),但任务栏中的许多元素都不起作用。
例如,单击搜索框不会执行任何操作,单击任务视图(Task View)可能会使您的 PC 崩溃。更重要的是,除非您使用像StartAllBack这样的第三方工具,否则“开始”菜单(Start Menu)不会打开。
如果您仍然想要经典(Classic)任务栏的外观和感觉:
- Press Win + R,键入 regedit,然后按Enter启动注册表编辑器(Registry Editor)。
- 将以下内容复制并粘贴到注册表编辑器的导航栏中,然后按 Enter:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionShellUpdatePackages
- 右键单击(Right-click)右窗格中的空白区域,然后选择New > DWORD (32-bit) Value。
- 双击(Double-click)该值,将其重命名为UndockingDisabled,并将该值设置为 1。
- 重新启动 Windows。
- 重新启动时,您将看不到任务栏右端的音量控制和网络图标。启动控制面板(Control Panel)并搜索通知区域图标(Notification Area Icons)以将其恢复。
- 选择打开(Select Turn)或关闭系统图标。
- 根据您的喜好打开系统图标,选择确定,然后退出控制面板(Control Panel)。
您将看到经典的任务栏和开始菜单(Start Menu)。但是您可能想要禁用“任务视图”(Task View)按钮。右键单击任务栏并选择显示(Show)任务视图按钮。这样做应该禁用任务视图(Task View)。
如何使Windows 11 上下文菜单看起来(Context Menu Look)像Windows 10
(Context)Windows 11上的(Windows 11)上下文菜单更短。许多用户不喜欢额外单击以查看上下文菜单中的所有选项的想法。您可以使用StartAllBack(StartAllBack)等第三方工具或调整注册表
轻松恢复在Windows 10上使用的较长上下文菜单,这是一件好事。
(Bring Back Older Context Menus)使用第三方工具
恢复旧的上下文菜单
从StartAllBack(StartAllBack)的左侧选择Explorer选项卡。然后,选中右侧窗格中经典(Classic)上下文菜单旁边的框。这就是您返回Windows 10(Windows 10)风格、更长的上下文菜单
所需要做的一切。
选中复选框后,您将看到扩展的上下文菜单。
(Bring Back Older Context Menus)通过注册表调整恢复(Registry Tweak)旧的上下文菜单
要获得更长的上下文菜单,请调整注册表:
- Press Win + R,键入 regedit,然后按Enter启动注册表编辑器(Registry Editor)。
- 将以下内容复制并粘贴到注册表编辑器的导航栏中,然后按 Enter:
HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareClassesCLSID
- 右键单击(Right-click)CLSID ,(CLSID)选择New > Key,然后将其命名:
{86ca1aa0-34aa-4e8b-a509-50c905bae2a2}
- 右键单击(Right-click)刚刚创建的新密钥,选择New > Key,然后将其命名:
InprocServer32
- 双击(Double-click)InprocServer32下名为 ( Default )的键,从值(Value)数据字段中删除值(默认情况下它没有任何值),然后选择确定。
- 重启。
如何使 Windows 11文件资源管理器看起来(File Explorer Look)像Windows 10
Windows 10文件资源管理器(File Explorer)顶部有一个功能区,其中包含复制、创建和重命名文件和文件夹等一系列功能。当然,您始终可以使用键盘快捷键,但某些选项(例如系统(System)属性)没有键盘快捷键。
不幸的是,Windows 11 文件资源管理器(Windows 11 File Explorer)缺少该功能区。但是,如果您习惯于从文件资源管理器(File Explorer)顶部使用这些功能,则可以使用StartAllBack或注册表调整来恢复它。
(Bring)使用第三方工具
恢复旧文件资源管理器(Old File Explorer)
以下是使用 StartAllBack
在Windows 11上恢复Windows 10 文件资源管理器的方法:(File Explorer)
- 从左侧选择资源管理器(Explorer)选项卡。
- (Select Win 10) 从名为“选择资源管理器(Choose Explorer)样式
”的部分中选择 Win 10 Ribbon UI 。
完成后,您将在文件(File)资源管理器顶部看到功能区:
通过注册表调整(Registry Tweak)切换到经典文件资源管理器(Classic File Explorer)
如果您不想安装第三方工具,也可以只调整注册表:
- Press Win + R,键入 regedit,然后按Enter。
- 将以下内容复制并粘贴到注册表编辑器的导航栏中:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Shell扩展
- 右键单击(Right-click)Shell Extensions(Shell Extensions)键,选择New > Key并将其命名为 Blocked。
- 选择Blocked键,切换到右窗格,右键单击空白区域,然后选择New > String value。
- 命名值:
{e2bf9676-5f8f-435c-97eb-11607a5bedf7}
- 重启。
重新启动时,您将启用Windows 10 经典文件资源管理器(Classic File Explorer)。
如何使Windows 11 角图标浮出控件看起来(Corner Icon Flyouts Look)像Windows 10
Windows 11 重新设计了几乎所有角落图标的弹出窗口,包括日历、音量和语言。但是,如果您使用StartAllBack作为第三方自定义工具,则可以对其中一些图标使用 Windows 10 弹出按钮:
- 从左侧边栏中
选择任务栏。(Taskbar)
- 在右窗格中,展开角(Corner)图标打开
旁边的下拉菜单。
- 如果可能,请选择(Select)Windows 10 浮出控件。
音量和日历等图标的弹出窗口现在将类似于 Windows 10。
但是,网络图标的弹出按钮保持不变。
最后(Final)一步:Windows 10壁纸(Wallpaper)
完成所有这些更改后,您的计算机应该在很大程度上与Windows 10相似。(Windows 10)但是,将壁纸更改为Windows 10默认设置可能是让您的视觉体验更接近(Windows 10)Windows 10的绝佳最后一招。
- 转到Windows 10 默认壁纸的图像(image of the Windows 10 default wallpaper)。
- 右键单击(Right-click)图像并选择将图像另存(Save)为。将文件保存(Save)在您的首选位置。
- 转到您保存文件的位置。
- 右键单击(Right-click)图像并选择设置(Set)为桌面背景。
或者,您也可以从“设置”应用更改壁纸(change the wallpaper)。
Windows 11,重新设计
Windows 11 附带了一些重大的设计更改。虽然许多人喜欢新的曲线界面,但其他Windows用户仍然喜欢Windows 10体验。Windows 10确实拥有任何版本的Windows中最好的界面之一。
通过本指南中讨论的方法,您应该能够使用具有所有新功能(如Android应用程序和小部件)的新Windows 11 PC,但还可以使用(Windows 11)Windows 10开始菜单(Start Menu)、任务栏和文件资源管理器(File Explorer)。希望(Hopefully)您喜欢您的Windows 11的新外观。
How to Make Windows 11 Look Like Windows 10
Making your Windows 11 look lіke Windows 10 requirеs a combination of tweaking your rеgistry settings and using a third-party tool. Fortunately, уou can choose if you want аll or only a few components to look like Windows 10.
For example, you might be annoyed that the Start Menu looks bigger but displays fewer items. Maybe you don’t like having to click “Show more options” to get the full context menu.
The good news is that you can change all this to what you remember from Windows 10. The bad news? Microsoft might disable a few registry hacks discussed in this guide with future Windows updates because it really wants you to use the newly designed interface.
Before You Start
Before you use any of the methods discussed in this guide, you should know the following:
- Some methods involve tweaking the registry.
While it’s safe to change registry settings mentioned in this guide, deleting an important registry key or modifying it could lead to major problems. You should back up your registry before starting.
- StartAllBack is a paid tool.
We’ve used StartAllBack as the third-party tool in methods that require one. The tool offers a 100-day trial but isn’t completely free. If you’re looking for a free tool, use Open-Shell from GitHub.
- Create a restore point.
There’s room for error whenever you’re changing too many things in Windows. You always want the option to undo the changes should you mess something up, so create a restore point before you perform any of the tweaks in this guide.
How to Make Windows 11 Start Menu Look Like Windows 10
The Start Menu is perhaps the most dreaded change in Windows 11. For decades, we had been moving the cursor to the bottom left and left-clicking to open the Start Menu — I could do it in my sleep.
Suddenly, Windows wants us to position the cursor somewhere closer to the center, based on how many pinned taskbar icons you have. Worse yet, you see plenty of wasted space on the Windows 11 Start Menu.
There are a few easy ways to fix the problem, though.
Position Start Menu to the Left Using the Built-In Tweak
Windows offers just one built-in tweak to make the Windows 11 Start Menu look like Windows 10 (though it does offer other Start Menu customization options). So if your primary Windows 11 pain point is the Start Menu, you might want to use a third-party tool.
If you’re not comfortable installing a third-party app, you can still left-align Start Menu like in Windows 10:
- Right-click on the taskbar and select Taskbar settings.
- Expand the section called Taskbar behaviors.
- Expand the drop-down menu next to Taskbar alignment and select Center.
This will put the Start Menu icon in the bottom-left corner of your screen.
Redesign Start Menu With a Third-Party Tool
If you want to redesign your Start Menu even more, use a third-party tool like StartAllBack. Downloading StartAllBack and launching the .exe will automatically apply a new theme to your computer. Once you see the changes applied:
- Right-click on the taskbar and select Properties.
- Select Kinda 10 from the Welcome tab as the theme.
You can also change other Start Menu settings by navigating to the Start Menu tab from the left. However, those settings are more about improving utility than making the Start Menu look like Windows 10’s Start Menu.
You still won’t see the tiles, and the design looks more like the Windows 7 Start Menu than Windows 10, except for the Windows 10 logo as the Start button.
However, changing the Start Menu might still make sense, given it doesn’t waste a ton of screen estate like the new Start Menu in Windows 11. So when you apply the settings, this is what your Start Menu will look like:
How to Make Windows 11 Taskbar Look Like Windows 10
Windows 11 has a few built-in taskbar tweaks, but you can’t make the taskbar look like Windows 10 using just those tweaks. You’ll need to use StartAllBack and make registry tweaks to restyle the new taskbar to look like Windows 10 taskbar.
Redesign Taskbar With a Third-Party Tool
If you like your taskbar at the top of your screen, Windows 11 won’t allow that. Unlike Windows 10, you can’t position your taskbar anywhere but at the bottom. StartAllBack’s taskbar settings can help you reposition and restyle the taskbar (or you can use TaskbarX for more taskbar modification options):
- Right-click on the taskbar and select Properties.
- Select Taskbar from the left.
- Select Taskbar location on screen as Top (or any other option you prefer).
Now, you’ll see the taskbar automatically move to the top of the screen:
Another thing you might consider changing is taskbar button grouping. Windows 10 lets you choose not to group taskbar buttons, but Windows 11 offers no such option. StartAllBack can help you fix this:
- Switch to the Taskbar tab on StartAllBack.
- Expand the drop-down menu next to Combine taskbar buttons and select Never.
Bring Back the Classic Taskbar With a Registry Tweak
You can switch to the Windows Classic taskbar using a registry tweak. While it makes the taskbar look a lot more like Windows 10 (partly because it also adds the search box), many of the elements in the taskbar don’t function.
For example, clicking on the search box won’t do anything, and clicking on the Task View might crash your PC. More importantly, the Start Menu won’t open unless you use a third-party tool like StartAllBack.
If you still want to Classic taskbar for its look and feel:
- Press Win + R, type regedit, and press Enter to launch the Registry Editor.
- Copy and paste the following in the Registry Editor’s navigation bar and press Enter:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Shell\Update\Packages
- Right-click on the blank space in the right pane and select New > DWORD (32-bit) Value.
- Double-click on the value, rename it to UndockingDisabled, and set the value as 1.
- Restart Windows.
- When you restart, you won’t see the volume control and network icons at the right end of the taskbar. Launch the Control Panel and search for Notification Area Icons to bring them back.
- Select Turn system icons on or off.
- Turn on the system icons per your preference, select OK, and exit the Control Panel.
You’ll see the classic taskbar and Start Menu. But you might want to disable the Task View button. Right-click on the taskbar and select the Show task view button. Doing this should disable the Task View.
How to Make Windows 11 Context Menu Look Like Windows 10
Context menus are shorter on Windows 11. Many users don’t appreciate the idea of an extra click to view all options in the context menu. It’s a good thing you can bring back the longer context menu you used on Windows 10 easily using a third-party tool like StartAllBack or tweaking the registry.
Bring Back Older Context Menus With a Third-Party Tool
Select the Explorer tab from the left on StartAllBack. Then, check the box next to Classic context menus in the right pane. That’s all you need to do to get back to Windows 10 style, longer context menus.
Once you’ve selected the checkbox, you’ll see the extended context menus.
Bring Back Older Context Menus With a Registry Tweak
To get longer context menus, tweak the registry:
- Press Win + R, type regedit, and press Enter to launch the Registry Editor.
- Copy and paste the following into the Registry Editor’s navigation bar and press Enter:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Classes\CLSID
- Right-click on CLSID, select New > Key, and name it:
{86ca1aa0-34aa-4e8b-a509-50c905bae2a2}
- Right-click on the new key you just created, select New > Key, and name it:
InprocServer32
- Double-click the key named (Default) under InprocServer32, remove the value from the Value data field (it won’t have any value by default), and select OK.
- Reboot.
How to Make Windows 11 File Explorer Look Like Windows 10
Windows 10 File Explorer had a ribbon at the top, which housed a range of functions like copying, creating, and renaming files and folders. Sure, you can always use the keyboard shortcuts, but some options like System properties don’t have a keyboard shortcut.
Unfortunately, Windows 11 File Explorer lacks that ribbon. However, if you’re habituated to using those functions from the top of the File Explorer, you can get it back using StartAllBack or a registry tweak.
Bring Back the Old File Explorer With a Third-Party Tool
Here is how you can bring back the Windows 10 File Explorer on Windows 11 using StartAllBack:
- Select the Explorer tab from the left.
- Select Win 10 Ribbon UI from the section called Choose Explorer style.
When done, you’ll see the ribbon at the top of the File Explorer:
Switch to the Classic File Explorer With a Registry Tweak
In case you don’t want to install a third-party tool, you can also just tweak the registry:
- Press Win + R, type regedit, and press Enter.
- Copy and paste the following into the Registry Editor’s navigation bar:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Shell Extensions
- Right-click on the Shell Extensions key, select New > Key, and name it Blocked.
- Select the Blocked key, switch to the right pane, right-click on the white space, and select New > String value.
- Name the value:
{e2bf9676-5f8f-435c-97eb-11607a5bedf7}
- Reboot.
You’ll have enabled the Windows 10 Classic File Explorer when you restart.
How to Make Windows 11 Corner Icon Flyouts Look Like Windows 10
Windows 11 redesigned almost every flyout for the corner icons, including the calendar, volume, and language. You can, however, use Windows 10 flyouts for some of these icons, provided you’re using StartAllBack as your third-party customization tool:
- Select Taskbar from the left sidebar.
- In the right pane, expand the drop-down menu next to Corner icons open.
- Select Windows 10 flyouts if possible.
Flyouts for icons like volume and calendar will now be similar to Windows 10.
However, the flyout for the network icon remains unchanged.
A Final Touch: Windows 10 Wallpaper
Once you’ve made all these changes, your computer should look and feel like Windows 10 to a good extent. However, changing the wallpaper to the Windows 10 default can be an excellent final touch to bring your visual experience closer to Windows 10.
- Go to an image of the Windows 10 default wallpaper.
- Right-click on the image and select Save image as. Save the file in your preferred location.
- Go to the location where you saved the file.
- Right-click on the image and select Set as desktop background.
Alternatively, you can also change the wallpaper from the Settings app.
Windows 11, Redesigned
Windows 11 comes with some major design changes. While many like the new, curvy interface, other Windows users continue to like the Windows 10 experience. Windows 10 indeed had one of the best interfaces of any version of Windows.
With the methods discussed in this guide, you should be able to use your new Windows 11 PC with all its new features, like Android apps and widgets, but with the Windows 10 Start Menu, taskbar, and File Explorer. Hopefully, you like your Windows 11’s new look.