Window Vista Ultimate
Sometimes they have been referred to as directories, which comes from older operating systems.
Press WinKey+R then type %systemroot% to find out! It will likely be C:\Windows\ but if you're using multiple versions of Windows on the same computer, the others could be on different drive letters e.g. N:\Windows\
In Microsoft operating systems, the letter C is typically used to indicate the first hard-disk based partition, and typically represents the boot drive. Letters A and B were, historically, allocated to floppy disk drives, while letters C and above are allocated to all other drives and their partitions. Note this is convention, not a requirement. It is possible (but unusual) to change the drive letters in a Windows operating system such that Z, for example, represents the same boot drive. Also note that the habit of allocating letters to different drives is a characteristic of some operating systems (such as CP/M, MS-DOS, and subsequently the Windows family of operating systems). Other operating systems, including the group of Unix (Linux) operating systems, have no notion of a drive letter, but integrate different "drives" into one folder hierarchy. Modern versions of Windows support a similar approach, but this method is not widely used.
Well, depends what you mean by 'main folder', if your on windows and you mean the operating system folder, you find it usually under C:\Windows\ or on older computers, C:\WINNT
If you are running a Windows operating system, in the Windows folder on your C:\ drive, in the Fonts folder are the fonts that are installed. If you browse to the folder in a Windows Explorer and show the Status bar (under the View menu) when you select the Fonts folder the number of fonts will appear in the status bar.
This depends on your Operating System. On a Windows OS, the most common and most important folders are Windows, system32 and most other folders inside the Windows folder, ProgramData, Program Files, Program Files (x86) (the installation folder for 32-bit programs on a 64-bit version of Windows), and Users.
AnswerRight click on a folder and select rename. Then press alt+255. Make sure you type the numbers from the number pad on your keyboard and not the ones below the f1...f12 keys. Press enter. You will have a folder wit no name displayed.You can also create a folder without a name by using alt+0160; it works for various Windows operating systems.
The Operating System is located in a folder on one of the hard drives usually C:\. This is one \Windows\System32 and \Windows\winsxs. System32 is where the main operating system is but the manafest files are in winsxs.
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A Mac is a computer and Windows is an operating system so it is impossible to change one into the other. If the Mac has an Intel processor you can downgrade it by installing the Windows operating system. You can use the Boot Camp utility (in the Utilities folder within the Applications folder) to partition your hard disc and install Windows so you can use both Mac OS X and Windows.
Open the folder and right click on an empty space in the folder. Then click on "Customize this folder." Click on the "Choose Picture" button and browse to a picture you want to use as the background of that folder.
This is not a C++ question. It is an operating system question. Different operating systems have different ways of making programs run on startup. Most of them have several different ways to accomplish this. In MS Windows, one way is to place a shortcut for the program in the "{percent}userprofile{percent}\Start Menu\Programs\Startup" shell folder.