This directory tree lets you separate business word processing
files from personal word processing files, and sales spreadsheets
from spreadsheet files used for financial projections.
Your directory structure may be as simple as this example or
much more complex. Organize your disk(s) to suit your needs.
As your needs change, you can modify the structure by deleting
old directories and creating new ones.
Here are some additional points about directories:
Name subdirectories the same way you name files. The
name can include up to eight characters (letters or
numbers), and you can add an extension of up to three
characters.
The root directory does not have a name. It is identified by
the backslash character: \ .
The total number of files and subdirectories in the root
directory must not exceed 512 on a hard disk or 112 on a
360KB diskette.
All directories other than the root directory can have any
number of files and subdirectories.
Like hard disks, diskettes have root directories, and you can
create subdirectories on diskettes the same way as you create
subdirectories on a hard disk.
The following sections describe how to create, use, and delete
directories.
The MS-DOS Shell program provides an easy way to see and
organize your
directories. See The MS-DOS Shell Program,”
later in
this
chapter,
and your MS-DOS Shell User's Guide.
4-18
Using
MS-DOS with Your Equity IIe
Summary of Contents for Equity IIe
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