The documentation says CDD /TO will "change the current directory in the Take Command Folders and List View windows without changing the TCC current directory."
When I enter it I get "The system cannot find the file specified."
I think you need to give "CDD /TO folder" instead of just "CDD /TO"
On Tue, May 4, 2010 at 7:27 AM, mcsuman <> wrote:
> The documentation says CDD /TO will "change the current directory in the
> Take Command Folders and List View windows without changing the TCC current
> directory."
>
> When I enter it I get "The system cannot find the file specified."
>
> What am I missing?
>
>
>
>
>
On Tue, 04 May 2010 10:27:11 -0400, mcsuman <> was
claimed to have wrote:
>The documentation says CDD /TO will "change the current directory
>in the Take Command Folders and List View windows without changing
>the TCC current directory."
>
>When I enter it I get "The system cannot find the file specified."
>
>What am I missing?
I think you need to give "CDD /TO folder" instead of just "CDD /TO"../QUOTE]
Well, maybe, but if you have to pick up the List View manually then "change the current directory in the Take Command Folders and List View windows without changing the TCC current directory" doesn't seem to make much sense, does it?
I think you need to give "CDD /TO folder" instead of just "CDD /TO"../QUOTE]
Well, maybe, but if you have to pick up the List View manually then "change the current directory in the Take Command Folders and List View windows without changing the TCC current directory" doesn't seem to make much sense, does it?
That I get. But I haven't figured out how to set the tree view to where I'm at (that is, what the default prompt would show if I haden't turned it off with prompt $g). ?
Maybe all I'm asking is what holds the TCC current directory?
CDD /T . will set the tree view to your current TCC directory. With the
following caveat - the tree does not automatically update when you create
subdirectories.
For example, if you MKDIR a new directory and CD into it and attempt to
set the treeview to the new directory, it won't show up. You have to
manually refresh the treeview using TCMD's File | Refresh menu option.
-Scott
mcsuman <> wrote on 05/04/2010 03:18:09 PM:
>
> That I get. But I haven't figured out how to set the tree view to
> where I'm at (that is, what the default prompt would show if I
> haden't turned it off with prompt $g). ?
>
>
>
>
On Tue, 04 May 2010 15:18:09 -0400, mcsuman <> was
claimed to have wrote:
>That I get. But I haven't figured out how to set the tree view to where I'm at (that is, what the default prompt would show if I haden't turned it off with prompt $g). ?
On Tue, 04 May 2010 15:18:10 -0400, mcsuman <> wrote:
|But I haven't figured out how to set the tree view to where I'm at (that is, what the default prompt would show if I haden't turned it off with prompt $g). ?
On Tue, 04 May 2010 15:18:10 -0400, mcsuman <> wrote:
|But I haven't figured out how to set the tree view to where I'm at (that is, what the default prompt would show if I haden't turned it off with prompt $g). ?
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