@Nudel
I understand this may have been one of the intended reasons for using Lister Styles, which will definitely get you the folders you want open in the lister. However, one utilization of Lister Styles is to just govern which elements appear in a lister, without saving folder paths in the style. If a system admin needs to create 20 or so styles just to govern Synchronize operations, the Styles Tab quickly gets cluttered with their Synchronize styles mixed in with the Element governing styles. It starts to become unfeasible for users like system administrators and web developers to set up a Lister Style for every Synchronization operation they need to perform.
Configuring a single Synchronize Style, and several toolbar buttons to load the folders (which could be added to menu of such buttons) makes a lot more sense. However, all the commands that should help in this endeavor have some sort of issue attached that prevents this.
@darkuni
It bugs me too (as in there is a bug in here). I can reproduce all of these same issues. A significant point here is that the commands: Set STATE= and Go OPENINDUAL OPENINSOURCE OPENINDEST OPENINLEFT OPENINRIGHT DUALPATH= produce inconsistent results when used from within a dual lister.
In fact, these issues have been on my list to test more thoroughly, write up, and submit detailed test cases and results to GPSoftware for some time now. I have just recently filed some of the related issue reports, but I have more to go through. These issues are one of the major reasons I submitted the Sync Pairs feature request.
Please click on the link above an read through the suggestions I have already submitted to GPSoftware. Also, please add your thoughts to that thread as well. I think you'll find that you and I are on the exact same page. However, if you see anything I've missed, please add it to the discussion in that thread, or at least acknowledge if those ideas make sense or not. I've tried to inspire some discussion there, but haven't had any takers (or detractors), which is particularly disappointing.