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practically anywhere! the best place is in your user account folder. right click, go to 'new' and select 'folder.' You then need to give the folder a name.
To manually place Counterstrike source files in GMod you will have to drag them either into the common folder or the folder with your name on it.
I think I've answered my own question after searching more on the web. From various posts going back to Acrobat 5, it looks like Adobe Acrobat can designate only one default folder -- My Documents. Several posters suggested the same workaround -- Create a shortcut to the folder of your choice, and place that shortcut in My Documents. Click on that shortcut to change from My Documents to your destination folder before you Save your scanned document. This does add an extra step, but it's a quick one to get you where you want to go. A benefit is that you can create multiple shortcuts to different folders. This can be handy if you frequently work in different folders and subfolders. To create a shortcut to a folder of your choice, here's what I did in Windows XP Pro. Fist, click on the default My Documents folder that Adobe points to. In my case, it was located in My Computer / Local Disk (C:) / Documents and Settings / Marie / My Documents. After highlighting the My Documents folder, select File / New / Shortcut. That opens the Create Shortcut wizard, which asks you to type in or Browse for your destination folder location. Once you've entered your destination folder name, click Next and type in a name for the shortcut. Click Finish and the shortcut to your chosen folder will be placed in the My Documents folder. You can create as many shortcuts to different destination folders as you'd like. I hope this helps if you've been aggravated by having to repeatedly drill down to different folders before saving your scans.
If you have WinZip, WinRar or 7-Zip then right click and select 'extact to [folder name]' or 'extract here' and it will copy the files from the zip folder to a seperate location.
When creating a new folder in Windows, right click in the desired place, and select 'New' >>> 'Folder' Then, it will have a text box displaying beneath the new folder. If you click outside of the folder, it automatically calls it 'New folder' until you rename it.
It is as simple as this: Go to the start bar and type : >C:\Users\Computername\Downloads *Computer name is what the name of your computer is* >Do >.minecraft >Texture Packs >Drag the given .zip folder into the Texture Packs folder. DO NOT EXTRACT THE FILES AND PASTE! <> You may however rename folder to name of your choice!
Finding where on the map are places you name.
Because there is already a folder with that name, it's called configurations, 'con' for short.
folder
In order to rename folder under Mac OS X you must select file/folder to rename, press ENTER (return) key, write new name of file/folder and again press ENTER key. In Windows ENTER key is used for executing/opening files. In Mac OS X RETURN key is used for renaming files/folder.
SystemRoot%SystemRoot% defines your Operating System's defualt folder or location that all the system files are stored at.%SystemRoot% is a system wide variable which refers to the path and folder name where system files are located. Typically this is C:\Windows, although you can designate a different drive or folder when windows is installed. you can use %SystemRoot% in place of the actual location of the folder that contains the windows system files.For example, to identify your system root folder, click Start -> Run, type %SystemRoot% and click OK. This will open windows explorer with your system root folder displayed.Confusingly if you go Start -> Control Panel -> System -> Advanced tab -> Environment Variables, then scroll to the bottom of the list and double click windir you will see that %SystemRoot% is actually a "Variable value" of a variable named windir. (see image below)
i do it manually. if you right click the name of the song in your windows media player, and find the file location, go to that location, and manually dragndrop that file into your my music folder