Is there some (unknown to me) Explorer limit on file display? One of my Windows 7 PCs decided to not boot anymore, or if it would boot, the response was glacially slow. Repair couldn't fix it, my restore points had disappeared, so I took out the HDD and hooked it up to another W7 desktop. One folder on that (damaged) HDD has a ton of music, which I stupidly never backed up. I attached an external drive to the working computer, intending to backup those files from the non-booting HDD before a reformat and reinstall.
When I open that drive (J
through Explorer on the working desktop, I see a long alphabetized list of folders and files - but nothing after the letter 'R'. I copied all of the files that were visible to an external drive, but for the rest of the files I had to go into DOS. There I could see the files that started with 'S' and 'T', etc. I could use DOS to copy them to that same external drive, but I wondered why it was necessary.
Is the some file count or folder size limit on what Explorer can display? According to DOS and Explorer, not a single file is missing from A-R on Explorer. Just nothing after that.
When I open that drive (J
Is the some file count or folder size limit on what Explorer can display? According to DOS and Explorer, not a single file is missing from A-R on Explorer. Just nothing after that.
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 home premium 64 bitAMD K103.00GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 532MHzATI AMD M880G with ATI Mobility Radeon HD 425...
- Computer type
- Laptop
- OS
- Windows 7 home premium 64 bit
- CPU
- AMD K10
- Motherboard
- Hewlett-Packard 1444 (Socket S1G4)
- Memory
- 3.00GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 532MHz
- Graphics Card(s)
- ATI AMD M880G with ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4250 (HP)
- Sound Card
- Realtek
- Screen Resolution
- 1366 x 768
- Hard Drives
- 465GB Western Digital
- Antivirus
- MSE