Windows xp print file names




















To open and view the contents of the My Documents folder: Double-click the My Documents icon on the desktop. The My Documents folder opens. OR Right-click the My Documents icon on the desktop. Choose Open. Your My Documents folder looks something like this:.

Creating, renaming, and deleting folders At some point, you may want to create a folder within a folder. Choose File New Folder. A new folder icon appears in My Documents, with its name highlighted. The default is New Folder. Type a new, more descriptive name , then click Enter. OR Open My Documents. To rename a folder: Locate your folder. Right-click the folder icon. The folder name is highlighted in blue , ready to be retyped.

OR Open your folder. Click the folder icon. Choose Rename this folder from the File and Folder Tasks menu. To delete a folder: Locate your folder. A Confirm Folder Delete dialog box appears asking you if you are sure you want to send the file to the Recycle Bin. The folder is moved to the Recycle Bin. Choose Delete this folder from the File and Folder Tasks menu. What is a drive? Your hard drive the drive inside your computer is known as the C: drive. Your floppy disk drive is known as the A: drive.

I followed the microsoft article for windows 7 to print the files in a folder. When I use 'Print Directory Listing' in the context menu I only get the list for the root directory, not for the folder selected.

If I shift and right click in the right hand side of Windows explorer and open a command prompt window and type 'printdir' even without typing. Why does it work when I run the Printdir. This purports to be free but it isn't unless you only want 5 files and 2 subfolders from each folder — you are told on starting the program.

I probably would have bought it if they had been upfront but I have now uninstalled it. My previous comment applied to John's reference to "print directory". I thought it would appear after his comment. I followed the directions listed here and now when I double-click a folder in Windows Explorer, it does not open the folder. How do I un-do what I did?

I have Vista Home version. I found this site looking for a simple way of creating a list of all folders and subfolders but NOT files ,in effect a tree of C:. I can reach C: and use various Dir commands but can't get exactly what I wish.

The Dos Tree command includes files which I wish to omit. Any got an answer? Thanks Veblen. Output to a CSV file Use spreadsheet program to read it. I tried the Printdir. Erin, this happened to me as well using XP —does anyone have an answer to how to undo the print directory changes? Forever, I've been wanting a simple way to accomplish this. Please Help!

Watching The Net : Where does the 'ls' fit into the Printdir. Hi Curtis, You're right, that link does appear to be broken. Luckily, YourDir is such a popular little freeware utility that lots of other sites have it. You should have read my post sent on 24 Dec , which included 2 solutions. For simplicity I repeat my previous post below. Very helpful. Excellent use of the basics… i've tried nearly every freeware program out there and this simple batch file does exactly what i've always wanted the programs to do..

Thanks for the info…. Shortcut isn't one of my choices. What gives? Program works fine except when I plug in my MP3 player via USB port and want to print the directory of what's on my player. It shows up as a drive, but won't let me print the directory.

Either there is no "Send To" shown when I right-click or I'm told I don;t have administrative rights it's my home computer and no one else uses it. Any suggestions? Thanks a lot for this! I didn't much like it when it just sent everything straight to the printer, but I found, in the comments, how to output to Notepad, and that is just perfect.

Much gratitude to everyone involved. Excellent article, thank you very much for creating this! I now can create a listing of all the files I put on a tape backup. I find that the Tree command works well too. Search the net and you will find a neat little freeware utility called YourDir that will output the results to a CSV file. YourDir shows the Directory and sub-directories up to 10 levels deep. Note: CSV Comma Separated Value files can be read by most spreadsheet programs including Excel and can also be read by most database programs.

YourDir is such a popular little freeware utility that lots of sites have it. Which worked in Windows 9x and even XP. If you're using a USB printer or a network printer it probably won't work, but if you have a printer connected to parallel port 1 it will still work. Search this list for "John W" and you will see several of my solutions to your problem. Better still, earch the net and you will find a neat little freeware utility called YourDir that will output the results to a CSV file or an image of your directory structure.

YourDir is a very basic Windows program that will run on any version of Windows up to Windows7 which I have just tested. Originally came from PC Magazine tpsetup. No matter what I try it will no longer work in Win7.

Tree Print would print or save to a file; an unlimited tree structure of many folders or an entire disk. Do you know of a Win7 compatible program currently that will do the same? Immediately above your post is my post about YourDir. YourDir will do everything that your require and works in Windows7 and I've just test tested it in Windows8 — no problems. See my post above yours for how to get YourDir.

Fine way of explaining, and pleasant article to get facts about my presentation subject, which i am going to deliver in school. I figured it out pretty quickly for a novice, due to your information. The list will look exactly like DOS output, which might not be ideal. But if you know how to use the program, it shouldn't be too tough to select and delete anything you don't want in the document.

Then, save it, print it, and keep it for future reference. Tip If you're a Microsoft Office guru, you could create a macro to clean up the output from a DOS command, maybe even convert it to a list of comma-separated values.

Then, you could save that file as a text file, and import it into an Access table or Excel spreadsheet. Whether or not this example of exporting filenames is of any value to you. But it is just an example. If you know DOS, you may be able to come up with more useful applications of your own. You can do anything at the Command Prompt window that you could do in DOS, even copy and delete files. Remember, for a quick overview of all the DOS commands available in the Command Prompt window, just type help at the command prompt and press Enter.



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