no
Warcraft 3's Default Directory On Windows is: C:\Program Files\Warcraft III In this situation A directory is the path you use to find a particular file
c:\winnt
program file in c:\ drive
All depends on the the game most likely it will be [harddrive]:\Program Files\ [Name of the Company that made it] \ [name of the game] \ Or [harddrive]:\Program Files\ [name of the game] \
C:\ is the root directory C:\folder\ is sub directory
I don't really understand your question, but maybe it is the compiler what you mean.
The attrib command is a Recovery Console command used to change the file attributes for a file or directory while in Recovery Console. An attrib command is also available from the Command Prompt. attrib [+r|-r] [+s|-s] [+h|-h] [+c|-c] [filename] +r = This assigns the read-only file attribute to the file or directory. -r = This removes the read-only attribute. +s = This assigns the system file attribute to the file or directory. -s = This removes the system attribute. +h = This assigns the hidden file attribute to the file or directory. -h = This removes the hidden attribute. +c = This assigns the compressed file attribute to the file or directory. -c = This removes the compressed attribute. filename = This is the file or directory that you are wanting to change the attributes of.
Read the documentation, and practice a lot.
With a compiler. Read the documentation for programming package for help on how to.
The system call opendir() is used in C programming to open a directory stream associated with the given directory name. It returns a pointer to the directory stream which can be used to read successive entries from the directory. This function is commonly used when working with directories in Unix-based operating systems.
The attrib command is a Recovery Console command used to change the file attributes for a file or directory while in Recovery Console. An attrib command is also available from the Command Prompt. attrib [+r|-r] [+s|-s] [+h|-h] [+c|-c] [filename] +r = This assigns the read-only file attribute to the file or directory. -r = This removes the read-only attribute. +s = This assigns the system file attribute to the file or directory. -s = This removes the system attribute. +h = This assigns the hidden file attribute to the file or directory. -h = This removes the hidden attribute. +c = This assigns the compressed file attribute to the file or directory. -c = This removes the compressed attribute. filename = This is the file or directory that you are wanting to change the attributes of.
active root directory in the case of c and d C and D both refer to drives and hard drives so in this case dos is asking for the correct directory of drives c and d because the old directory no longer exists.