? After I Moved Libraries ie. Documents, Pictures and Download Folders

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  1. Posts : 12,801
    Windows 11 Pro
       #31

    I understand what he did. What I am saying is because in the left pane he clicks his libraries and they open, he thinks that means they are on C when they are not on C, they are on D. He doesn't understand that the Libraries are just a shortcut to D.

    If the Library folders are missing from his users, where could they be on C? They can't be there.
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  2. Posts : 617
    windows 10 pro
    Thread Starter
       #32

    >I am confused then ??? ...cos nothing should be empty on D:\

    You cloned the SSD Drive (c:) to the HDD (d:) so everything should be in D:\Users\phaedruspress\Docs (or Pics or Music etc)


    Sorry, I guess I could have been more clear. After successfully "dual booting" I booted into D and you are right since the image replicated everything on the SSD there were in fact items in the Docs, Downloads and Pic folders but since I knew that I was going to move the SSD folders to the D drive I deleted everything in the D Users MYNAME folders. So the doc folders etc on the D drive are now empty, And from my above posts all of the info from the SSD folders now reside on the D drive in the folder that I created called "C SSD" which now houses the contents from the SSD ie the contents in the SSD docs, pics and downloads folders.

    So from now on when I boot up the D drive and I find myself for whatever reason working from that drive should I download something for example it will be saved to the D user downloads folder which is currently empty.

    Did I explain that or just muddle things?

    >AND since you also moved the Libraries off the SSD (C: Drive) to D:\C_SSD\Docs (etc) they should also ALL be in there too

    Yup. They are there just where I want them in C SSD folder.

    >ie taking up twice as much space.

    So it is not really taking up 2x the space since the D folders are empty (only the C SSD folder has items in it.) The only space that I perhaps have been cavalier about was installing a 2nd OS on the 500GB HDD which took up about 50GB or so. I should also point out while I have an abundance of external storage my 7 yr. old laptop had only a 250GB hard drive and you guessed it I dual booted that with two identical win 7 partitions which over the course of 7 years now no longer look at all alike and mostly as I plan to do with this new computer one of the partitions that I can boot from on the old notebook I maybe boot into it once every couple of months. It is there for emergencies and troubleshooting. So with the new computer I have a total of 750GB of hard drive space and for the time being I am not at all concerned with saving space and having the comfort of not only having image backups but immediately being able to boot from another internal hard drive should the SSD go sideways lets me sleep at night : )
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  3. Posts : 617
    windows 10 pro
    Thread Starter
       #33

    >essenbeI understand what he did. What I am saying is because in the left pane he clicks his libraries and they open, he thinks that means they are on C when they are not on C, they are on D. He doesn't understand that the Libraries are just a shortcut to D.

    Yeah. It took me a while to figure that one out : )
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  4. Posts : 12,801
    Windows 11 Pro
       #34

    phaedruspress said:
    >essenbeI understand what he did. What I am saying is because in the left pane he clicks his libraries and they open, he thinks that means they are on C when they are not on C, they are on D. He doesn't understand that the Libraries are just a shortcut to D.

    Yeah. It took me a while to figure that one out : )
    So, everything is as it should be? Your Libraries are working correctly on the D Drive? Or do you still think they are on C Drive as well as D?
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  5. Posts : 617
    windows 10 pro
    Thread Starter
       #35

    >So, everything is as it should be?

    Yes. When I boot into D the libraries are empty because after I wrote the SSD image to the D drive so I could dual boot I deleted the contents of the libraries on the D drive since the contents from the SSD docs, pics etc folders now reside in the D drive in the folder C SSD.

    >
    Your Libraries are working correctly on the D Drive?

    Yes. As mentioned they are empty however when and if I choose to boot into D and have an occasion to save a doc or to download something it will be downloaded to the currently empty folders completely separate from the C SSD folders which house the info that were previously on the C drive.

    >Or do you still think they are on C Drive as well as D?

    No, as I mentioned while it took me awhile to grasp the difference between the Library folders and the folders of the same name in the User->MYNAME etc. folders everything appears to be setup now the way I want it that is until MS forces an update on me and breaks everything : ) however I do have some leeway since I have deferred the
    fall creators 1709 update for 365 days though I suspect I will install it within the next few months. Thanks for your help.
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  6. Posts : 2,324
    Win10
       #36

    phaedruspress said:
    >I am confused then ??? ...cos nothing should be empty on D:\

    You cloned the SSD Drive (c:) to the HDD (d:) so everything should be in D:\Users\phaedruspress\Docs (or Pics or Music etc)


    Sorry, I guess I could have been more clear. After successfully "dual booting" I booted into D and you are right since the image replicated everything on the SSD there were in fact items in the Docs, Downloads and Pic folders but since I knew that I was going to move the SSD folders to the D drive I deleted everything in the D Users MYNAME folders. So the doc folders etc on the D drive are now empty, And from my above posts all of the info from the SSD folders now reside on the D drive in the folder that I created called "C SSD" which now houses the contents from the SSD ie the contents in the SSD docs, pics and downloads folders.

    So from now on when I boot up the D drive and I find myself for whatever reason working from that drive should I download something for example it will be saved to the D user downloads folder which is currently empty.

    Did I explain that or just muddle things?
    Okay now I understand what you did .............

    If you boot off the HDD in the future , it will become C:\ so as long as you did not move the locations of the Libraries in that OS too then it will save files to the Original Libraries Locations.... ie C:\Users\phaedruspress\Docs etc etc

    However your new Libraries in D:\C_SSD\ would then become C:\C_SSD\ etc etc if booting the HDD, so you would either need to add those new locations to the Libraries "View" OR once booted to the HDD move the libraries locations to the C_SSD Folders ( now on C remember) so you see them normally from the Libraries in the LH Explorer Pane.

    I would recommend reading these short Tutorials 1st :

    Set Save Location for Library in Windows 10 Customization Tutorials

    Include Folder to Library in Windows 10 Customization Tutorials

    Move Libraries Above This PC in Navigation Pane in Windows 10 Customization Tutorials


    KB.
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  7. Posts : 617
    windows 10 pro
    Thread Starter
       #37

    >Okay now I understand what you did .............

    Thanks for the patience : )

    >
    If you boot off the HDD in the future , it will become C:\ so as long as you did not move the locations of the Libraries in that OS too then it will save files to the Original Libraries Locations.... ie C:\Users\phaedruspress\Docs etc etc

    Exactly.

    >However your new Libraries in D:\C_SSD\ would then become C:\C_SSD\ etc etc if booting the HDD, so you would either need to add those new locations to the Libraries "View" OR once booted to the HDD move the libraries locations to the C_SSD Folders ( now on C remember) so you see them normally from the Libraries in the LH Explorer Pane.

    You know I am not quite sure I follow. When I boot into the HDD if I want to access the files that were formerly on the SSD that are now in the folder D:/C SSD their address when I am on D is still D:/C SSD. I don't need to see the C SSD folder in the Libraries when I am on D. If I want to access them I just open the C SSD folder. Right now they are just sitting there (when I boot into D) This PC -> Windows ->C SSD. I believe I accomplished what I wanted to (with lots of help, of course) but then again I am probably just not understanding what you wrote above.




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  8. Posts : 2,324
    Win10
       #38

    phaedruspress said:
    >Okay now I understand what you did .............

    Thanks for the patience : )

    >
    If you boot off the HDD in the future , it will become C:\ so as long as you did not move the locations of the Libraries in that OS too then it will save files to the Original Libraries Locations.... ie C:\Users\phaedruspress\Docs etc etc

    Exactly.

    >However your new Libraries in D:\C_SSD\ would then become C:\C_SSD\ etc etc if booting the HDD, so you would either need to add those new locations to the Libraries "View" OR once booted to the HDD move the libraries locations to the C_SSD Folders ( now on C remember) so you see them normally from the Libraries in the LH Explorer Pane.

    You know I am not quite sure I follow. When I boot into the HDD if I want to access the files that were formerly on the SSD that are now in the folder D:/C SSD their address when I am on D is still D:/C SSD. I don't need to see the C SSD folder in the Libraries when I am on D. If I want to access them I just open the C SSD folder. Right now they are just sitting there (when I boot into D) This PC -> Windows ->C SSD. I believe I accomplished what I wanted to (with lots of help, of course) but then again I am probably just not understanding what you wrote above.

    :)

    If you Boot the HDD it will be C Drive..... the Boot Drive is ALWAYS C no matter what , at least I have never seen otherwise but then you are using a BIOS Dual Boot not a traditional Dual-boot so I don't know if it somehow handles it differently?....... but AFAIK the Bootable/Active Drive was always C ie if you did it right now the Drive Letters would just simply reverse since both Drives are Valid and operational....this is what happens on my Win10/XP Dualboot , In each OS I set the other OS drive letter to X though (DVDs are Y and Z) so as not to accidentally access the incorrect OS's files and let flash drives and Externals appear down at E,F,G etc. in File Explorer

    If you are on D: ie you boot the HDD... it is now C: ...... assuming I am correct above ......

    so your current Libraries at D:\C_SSD\ would then be at C:\C_SSD\ not D:\C_SSD\ ie assume for example the SSD did die and thus there would be no D Drive even showing....

    If you do what i said above you can access those Libraries as Normal ...ie no need to access the C_SSD Folder to find them , they just appear as normal in the LH Pane of File Explorer Under your Libraries, as that OS thinks those Folders are your Libraries for that OS.

    Damn you are making me think way too hard for a Friday night :)

    KB.
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  9. Posts : 12,801
    Windows 11 Pro
       #39

    What @Kbird says is correct. I have 4 operating systems which are not dual boots, each is on a different hard drive. I select which OS by using the one time boot menu key. I am not offered the selection on a normal boot. No matter which OS on any drive I boot into it is always the C drive. If it isn't something is wrong.

    He is also correct about your C_SSD folder. When that hard drive becomes the C drive, everything on that drive is C:/. The only way to stop that would be to create a partition with a different drive letter for your C_SSD files. Then they should always be the same drive letter.
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  10. Posts : 617
    windows 10 pro
    Thread Starter
       #40

    >If you Boot the HDD it will be C Drive..... the Boot Drive is ALWAYS C no matter what

    Right. I was once again confused when I read your post and commented that I was unable to follow.

    >
    so your current Libraries at D:\C_SSD\ would then be at C:\C_SSD\

    Yup. And by current you mean the ones that I put there from the SSD, right?

    >
    If you do what i said above you can access those Libraries as Normal ...ie no need to access the C_SSD Folder to find them , they just appear as normal in the LH Pane of File Explorer Under your Libraries, as that OS thinks those Folders are your Libraries for that OS.

    This is what I see. If I want to access the folders from the SSD that now reside on the HDD I need to open up "C" and click on the C SSD folder. If you are saying that I can put the C SSD folder in the Library section on the D drive now the C drive since I have booted into it I understand and believe I know how to do that but for the time being I do not believe I want it there. No logical reason but everything is "working" and set up like I wanted so I'm good : )

    >
    Damn you are making me think way too hard for a Friday night

    What about me. All I seem to do is confuse myself!

    ? After I Moved Libraries ie. Documents, Pictures and Download Folders-capture.jpg









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