Windows 7 - Trouble Dispaying Sub-Folders In WinXP3

Asked By Barry Bruyea on 20-Jan-12 06:28 AM
If I knew why, I would not be posting asking the question.  All I know
is that in spite of the suggested fix, folders with sub-folders
continue to be absent a + sign.  When I click on them, they are shown
in the right hand panel of Explorer but no drop down list is shown
under them in the left hand panel.  When pulling up the directory in
an application to determine where I want to save something all I get
is the lead folder with no +, ergo, I cannot access the sub-folder to
save the file.  (I am using XP3.)


Char Jackson replied to Barry Bruyea on 20-Jan-12 11:23 AM
I replied to this in the other group where you posted it. I am not sure
why you have multiple identical threads going. Next time, please just
crosspost if you feel the need to span groups.
dadiOH replied to Barry Bruyea on 21-Jan-12 08:47 AM
That is normal (no + sign) except when using Windows Explorer.  To access
sub-folders via another program - an app -  click the parent; that will
display the folders contained in the parent.

--

dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
Tim Meddick replied to Barry Bruyea on 21-Jan-12 09:07 AM
I am pretty sure that the poster asking :

beans already."

...was referring to the actual Folder & Path names of the specific problem
directories...

Because it may well help us all to help you if we saw the folder-hierarchy
(the structure and the number of sub-folders involved).

You could do this by opening a "Window's Command Prompt" (enter "cmd.exe"
into the "Run" box on the Start Menu) and type at the prompt :

tree [path]

...where you would replace [path] with the actual path to one of the
Else, still from within a Command Prompt, navigate with the "cd"
command, to one of the folders concerned, and just type :

tree

...on it is own, with no parameters typed after it (only if executed from a
folder that will not "expand" in explorer).

So, you might have to end up typing :

C:\> cd \

...to logon to the "root" directory... then :

C:\> cd C:\Documents and Settings

...to get to the profile's folder ( press the tab key at any time, to cycle
through all available folders / file names, accessible to that location ),
then :

C:\> cd Johnny

...if your profile-name was "Johnny" ( press [tab] to cycle through
available options ) then, maybe :

C:\> cd My Documents

C:\> cd BadFolder

...I hope you get the idea. - Then finally, when you have arrived at the
folder that will not respond in explorer, type the command :

C:\> tree

...then you can "copy" (by click-and-hold the left mouse button, and drag
to highlight the folder structure that was the output of the "tree"
command - and right-click in that highlighted are and choose "copy" )  the
output, and "paste" it into a re-post here...

It should look something like this :

R:\
????????????TEMP
???   ????????????PSEDIT
???   ????????????COPY
????????????JPG
????????????DOSBox
????????????ICO
???   ????????????0
???   ????????????2
???   ????????????3
???   ????????????6
???   ????????????7
???   ????????????8
???   ????????????A
???   ????????????B
???   ????????????C
???   ????????????D
???   ????????????F
???   ????????????G
???   ????????????COPY
????????????Bart's Stuffit 5
???   ????????????SCRNSH
???   ????????????RESULT
????????????TESTIT
???   ????????????DIR1
???   ???   ????????????MYTEST
???   ???       ??????TST1
???   ???       ??????TST2
???   ???       ??????TST3
???   ???       ??????TST4
???   ????????????DIR2
???       ????????????MYTEST
???           ??????TST1
???           ??????TST2
???           ??????TST3
???           ??????TST4
????????????MAKVBS
???   ????????????EXPORT
????????????Synergie

...only allot worse!

==

Cheers,    Tim Meddick,    Peckham, London.    :-)
Barry Bruyea replied to dadiOH on 21-Jan-12 12:45 PM
Doesn't display sub-folders when I click on the folder when in another
application and also, does not display the + sign in all folders in
Explorer, just some of them.
Barry Bruyea replied to Tim Meddick on 21-Jan-12 12:49 PM
I appreciate the advice, Tim, and that you took the time to give it,
but there are dozens of folders involved and I gather you are saying
I'd have to do the above for every folder not showing the + sign.
dadiOH replied to Barry Bruyea on 21-Jan-12 01:00 PM
Then it would appear that the directory entries are messed up.  That or
Windows itself.

--

dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
Tim Meddick replied to Barry Bruyea on 21-Jan-12 09:48 PM
Not necessarily!....
....you would not have to show results for
ALL of the "folder not showing the + sign" - just a select "one" or "two"
of them - to see if there is any common denominators that might drawn from
(at least "two" quoted paths), and so may be involved in a possible
solution...

==

Cheers,    Tim Meddick,    Peckham, London.    :-)