- Color of fonts of some files names have changed
- Posted by Bob S on April 24th, 2008
I have WinXP SP2.
Starting yesterday, the coloring of some file names have
changed. Whether I view files through Windows Explorer or
the open file dialog for a program, the names of some files
are blue, and some (maybe most) are black, as before.
There doesn't appear to be a pattern to this, such as by the
age of the file or when it was last modified.
Any idea what the problem is and how to fix it?
Thanks.
--
Bob S.
- Posted by Big Al on April 24th, 2008
Bob S wrote:
I wouldn't be concerned. If you use them / edit them they will return
to black.
http://www.tutorials-win.com/MediaCe...lue-filenames/
- Posted by Ashik(Hyderabad) on April 24th, 2008
"Bob S" wrote:
Hey ,I Think the hard disk drives in which u see combination of blue is NTFS
drive and only NTFS drives have such a oppurtunity..This is because NTFS
drives can be compressed,The File system is such a system it can compress
itself without any 3rd programmer's software.So I think you had compressed
the drive and in middle you had stopped compressing and that led for such a
combination of blue and black file names(blue representing compressed file
black representing normal uncompresssed file)OR else
U had enabled the scheduled option to compress a particular disk or drive
at some time of the week/month or you must have scheduled this compression
option when system is 30 min or 4 hours in standby mode...like that..There
are no problems and just compress the whole drive so that all blue names
appear..
- Posted by John on April 24th, 2008
"Bob S" <xxxx@xxxxx.com> wrote in message
news:49i1149dcm72m25i342qvg9aqhfo1vrcr2@4ax.com...
They're compressed NTFS files/folder.
Windows Explorer - Tools - Folder Options - View - Show encrypted or
compressed NTFS files in color (uncheck)
They will all be in black font now.
- Posted by Bob S on April 24th, 2008
Bob S <xxxx@xxxxx.com> wrote:
Changing the setting in Folder Options, as John suggested,
did the trick.
Thanks for all of your replies.
--
Bob S.