If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Rate Thread | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
trash bin menu
When I click on the trash bin with right mouse button, I accidently chose
"make short cut". I just wanted to empty the trash bin. I wonder... what in heavens name is the use of making more trash bin short cuts??? -- |\ /| | \/ |@rk \../ \/os |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
trash bin menu
On Wed, 04 Jan 2017 14:12:37 +0000, Nadegda
wrote: On Wed, 4 Jan 2017 14:54:56 +0100, Linea Recta wrote: When I click on the trash bin with right mouse button, I accidently chose "make short cut". I just wanted to empty the trash bin. I wonder... what in heavens name is the use of making more trash bin short cuts??? There is a issue in the modular-transwarp floating facility. You will have to spin the emergency indicator using a quasilevel otherwise the malfunctioning reptocompass will misbehave. You may need a new bio-medical hyperlinker. Check the circulation of the hexijig mode. Also coil the omega-input rummaging transporter if necessary. No. No. Nadega has it entirely backwards. Follow the steps but do exactly the reverse or the glipsammer will fail catastrophically, and you know what that means. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
trash bin menu
In message , Elias
writes: On Wed, 04 Jan 2017 14:12:37 +0000, Nadegda wrote: On Wed, 4 Jan 2017 14:54:56 +0100, Linea Recta wrote: When I click on the trash bin with right mouse button, I accidently chose "make short cut". I just wanted to empty the trash bin. I wonder... what in heavens name is the use of making more trash bin short cuts??? (Seriously, see below.) There is a issue in the modular-transwarp floating facility. You will have to spin the emergency indicator using a quasilevel otherwise the malfunctioning reptocompass will misbehave. You may need a new bio-medical hyperlinker. Check the circulation of the hexijig mode. Also coil the omega-input rummaging transporter if necessary. No. No. Nadega has it entirely backwards. Follow the steps but do exactly the reverse or the glipsammer will fail catastrophically, and you know what that means. Lovely (-:! Seriously, I can see very little point in making extra short cuts to the recycle bin (I think "trash bin" might be Apple-speak); however, whoever wrote the right-click menu didn't think it worth writing a special version just on the offchance you might use it on the recycle bin rather than things for which making shortcuts _are_ useful, so it remains. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf By most scientific estimates sustained, useful fusion is ten years in the future - and will be ten years in the future for the next fifty years or more. - "Hamadryad", ~2016-4-4 |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
trash bin menu
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
On Wed, 4 Jan 2017 14:54:56 +0100, Linea Recta wrote: When I click on the trash bin with right mouse button, I accidently chose "make short cut". I just wanted to empty the trash bin. I wonder... what in heavens name is the use of making more trash bin short cuts??? [snip] Seriously, I can see very little point in making extra short cuts to the recycle bin (I think "trash bin" might be Apple-speak); In Apple-land, it's the trash can. Shrug. however, whoever wrote the right-click menu didn't think it worth writing a special version just on the offchance you might use it on the recycle bin rather than things for which making shortcuts _are_ useful, so it remains. It doesn't really how useless it might be; if it wasn't available, someone would complain. -- - Am I close to the end of this bridge? - No, far from it. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
trash bin menu
Linea Recta wrote:
When I click on the trash bin with right mouse button, I accidently chose "make short cut". I just wanted to empty the trash bin. I wonder... what in heavens name is the use of making more trash bin short cuts??? For one thing, the Recycle Bin object normally displayed on the desktop is not a shortcut. It is a shell object (aka shell extension) defined in the registry, not a .lnk file for a shortcut on the desktop. Right-clicking on a shell object does not give you a Properties of a ..lnk shortcut file. It gives you the panel(s) defined in the registry or within the resources of the handler. Another thing is that the desktop is itself a folder. So you have a shell object for the Recycle Bin in a folder called Desktop under your user profile folder (%userprofile%). It is a special folder so shell objects can be added to it. Other shell objects you may have added to the Desktop folder are [My] Computer and Network. Those are not shortcuts (.lnk files). Awhile back in some prior version of MS Office, Outlook was added to the Desktop folder but as a shell object, not as a shortcut file. It confused many users who thought all the icons on their desktop were shortcuts just because that's how users add them. In my instance of Windows, the Recycle Bin shell folder object is defined at HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{645FF040-5081-101B-9F08-00AA002F954E}. The class ID is probably the same for your Windows. You can use Nirsoft's Shell Extension Viewer to see them. Be careful with that tool. It is not just a viewer and you could end up altering stuff you should not touch or results in some behavior you don't want or wanted but lost. For another thing, who says you won't want a shortcut to the Recycle Bin put in a different folder? Part of Windows lure to many users is the many ways they can tweak that OS, so much so that lots of authors have written lots of tweakers and enhancements to address all this fluff in customizing Windows. When you right-click on the Recycle Bin shell folder (not a shortcut) and use the Create New Shortcut entry in the context menu, you do get a shortcut (.lnk file). Now you can move it anywhere you want, like into a different folder. I know folder that detest having icons on their desktop. So they could create a Start menu subfolder, say, called WinTools, and put a shortcut to the Recycle Bin in that folder and then use the Personalization wizard to remove the shell folder from the Desktop folder. However, because it is now just a shortcut (instead of a shell object), right-clicking and selecting Properties will NOT display the panel(s) available for the shell object, just the standard properties for a .lnk file. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
trash bin menu
On Wed, 4 Jan 2017 17:37:24 +0000, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
Seriously, I can see very little point in making extra short cuts to the recycle bin I wonder what happens if you drag the recycle-bin shortcut into the recycle bin. Is that like typing "Google" into Google? (The latter, as all true geeks know, will break the Internet.) -- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://BrownMath.com/ http://OakRoadSystems.com/ Shikata ga nai... |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
trash bin menu
On Wed, 4 Jan 2017 21:50:29 -0500, Stan Brown wrote in message:
: On Wed, 4 Jan 2017 17:37:24 +0000, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote in message: : Seriously, I can see very little point in making extra short cuts to the recycle bin I wonder what happens if you drag the recycle-bin shortcut into the recycle bin. Is that like typing "Google" into Google? (The latter, as all true geeks know, will break the Internet.) I don't foresee any problems in dragging the Recycle Bin shortcut into the Recycle Bin--provided the Recycle Bin and the shortcut don't shake hands with each other. Quote of the Day: "The discovery of the positron in 1932 confirmed [Paul] Dirac's theory and led to his being awarded the Nobel Prize for physics in 1933. We now know that every particle has an antiparticle, with which it can annihilate. (In the case of the force-carrying particles, the antiparticles are the same as the particles themselves.) "There could be whole antiworlds and antipeople made out of antiparticles. However, if you ever meet your antiself, don't shake hands! You would both vanish in a great flash of light." --Stephen Hawking (1942- ) _A Brief History of Time_ [1996], "Elementary Particles and the Forces of Nature" |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | Rate This Thread |
|
|