Root directory is the highest level directory and this is the directory that appears first on the screen when you start MS-DOS. Generally, 'C' Drive appears on the MS-DOS screen as root directory.
C:\ is the root directory C:\folder\ is sub directory
C is the root directory in most but where ever the drive on which the windows is installed
A Linux / Unix-based web server will have it's default root set to /var/www, though this can be changed. On Windows, it will vary depending on the software used - for Apache, it is something like C:/Program Files/Apache SoftwareFoundation/Apache2.2/htdocs
The Directory never allowed Napoleon to do so, Napoleon committed a coupe and overthrew the Directory.
The French Directory had five members.
The root directory is usually /.
"/" is the root directory in Linux. Make sure not to confuse this with the "/root" directory, which is the home directory for the user "root" (similar to "Administrator" on Windows)
C:\ is the root directory C:\folder\ is sub directory
The root directory is the top level directory of the entire file system. Every branch starts from there. The current working directory is where you happen to be in the tree at the moment. If the root is always "/" and my process is in the directory /usr/local/bin/test/data, then the root directory is still "/" and my working directory is currently /usr/local/bin/test/data
"cd /" will move the user to the root directory, assuming the user has permission to move to this directory, and the user has not been chroot'ed to a specific directory (which will cause "cd /" to move the user to that named directory, instead of the system's root).
root directory
Root directory.
root directory
root directory is the top of the directory tree. it is \ on windows (or c:\ d:\ etc.) and / on unix/linux
The root directory is indicated by a "/'. You can navigate to the root directory using the command 'cd /'.
C is the root directory in most but where ever the drive on which the windows is installed
The Root folder and Root directory is the Main location for the Linux system. Only users with super user privileges can access the directory. ANY changes made successfully in the root directory will be system wide. its the quickest way to destroy the operating system!