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PPC
> Computing
Guides > Windows
Windows 2000 Secrets: Windows Explorer
Revealing his next consignment of Windows 2000
secrets, Dave Cook turns his attention to Windows Explorer.
Improved
Search facilities and a useful synchronize tool help to make Windows
2000 Explorer even more powerful than earlier versions. It still
works in much the same way, though. Hence, most of the tips we’ll
be covering here and in our final look at Windows 2000 Explorer will
also work on other Windows operating systems.
To open Windows 2000 Explorer, you click Start,
select Programs, Accessories, and then Windows Explorer. But, hey,
that method is for wimps! For speedier access, it’s better to
create an Explorer shortcut on the desktop (or on the taskbar at the
bottom of the screen, for that matter).
You can create shortcuts in various ways. The
simplest is to click Start, and select Programs, and Accessories
like before. Then right-click on Windows Explorer (keeping the
button pressed down) and drag the icon onto the desktop before
releasing the mouse button. From the pop-up menu that appears,
select Create Shortcut(s) Here. Congratulations, you now have
a Windows Explorer shortcut that can be dragged or positioned
anywhere on the desktop (or taskbar).
Once launched, the default view of Explorer displays
a two-pane view showing folders and subfolders in the left pane, and
the contents of the current folder including subfolders in the right
pane. All icons in the right pane will be large.
If you would like to see more information about each
file contained in the My Documents folder, for example, first ensure
that the My Documents folder is highlighted in Explorer’s left
pane, and that its contents (if any) are displayed in the right
pane. Then, from the menu at the top of the screen, click View,
Details.
To display even more information, click View, Choose
Columns. You’ll see that from here Explorer can be made to display
many other pieces of information about a file or folder, including
its attributes, information about its owner, or author, and even
when it was last accessed.
Hide and Seek
In Windows 2000, Microsoft has again set the default
Explorer view to hide important operating system files. This might
be fine for Timid Timmy, but if you’re in the least bit curious
about your operating system you’ll want to view everything stored
on it. To do so, click Tools, and then Folder Options. Once opened,
you’ll see that apart from a few notable inclusions, such as
Offline Files settings, the Windows 2000 Folder Options is a lot
like the one in, say, Windows Me.
The Folder Options dialog box allows you to alter a
wide range of configuration settings, but we’ll concentrate on
just two. Our first priority is to let Explorer display all those
hidden system files. So click the View tab, and in the advanced
settings dialog box, find the Hidden Files And Folders selection and
then place a checkmark in the Show Hidden Files And Folders option.
Click
OK for your new settings to take effect, but note that the first
time you try to view the WINNT folder, to display all your system
files you may have to click Show Files (in the right pane) first.
Our second example of how to customise Explorer
requires us to return to the same My Documents folder that we
changed earlier. Having gone to all the trouble of setting the My
Documents folder to your liking, the next step is to make all of
your folders appear in the same way. To do so, click Tools, Folder
Options, and the View tab once more. Now click the Like Current
Folder button to set all of your folders with the same view settings
as the My Documents folder.
Next Time
Windows 2000’s Explorer is good, but it’s not
perfect. For example, the way in which it defaults to the My
Documents folder on launch doesn’t suit everyone. In our final
look at Windows 2000 Explorer, we’ll show you how to change that
setting. Thus, ensuring Explorer opens the way you – and not
Microsoft - want it to.
Read part one
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