On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 8:25 PM, W. eWatson <wolftra...@invalid.com> wrote: > So what's the bottom line? This link notion is completely at odds with XP, > and produces what I would call something of a mess to the unwary Python/W7 > user. Is there a simple solution?
I know people went off on a tangent talking about symbolic links and hard links, but it is extremely unlikely that you created something like that by accident. Windows just doesn't create those without you doing quite a bit of extra work. It certainly doesn't create them when you drag & drop files around through the normal interface. > How do I get out of this pickle? I just want to duplicate the program in > another folder, and not link to an ancestor. You need to dig into the technical details of what's happening on your hard drive. You say you "copied a program from folder A to folder B". Can you describe, exactly, what steps you took? What was the file name of the program? Was it just one file, or a directory, or several files? What was the path to directory A? What is the the path to directory B? When you open a CMD window and do a dir of each directory, what exactly do you see? You've given a pretty non-technical description of the problem you're experiencing. If you want more than wild speculation, you'll need to give more specifics for people to help you with. My wild guess: you held down control and shift while copying your program. That's the keyboard command to create a shortcut instead of moving or copying a file. -- Jerry -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list