Thanks for the info. I won't be buying it as I don't use it very much and have been using LibreCad for the moment.Superb for the money. 99% of the capability and functionality of Autocad 2D, for a tiny fraction of the cost. You can probably no longer access it because in January it went from being a freebie to costing about £90 per year.
Ah, yea Microsoft don't actually make it that obvious (Explorer usually just showing This PC > Desktop).I keep running into "Path not found". I've tried all sorts of variants of c:\ Desktop_Work with no luck. All my important folders are stored on my desktop.
cmd
) as normal; i.e. not admin, then it should start in your user directory. E.g. C:\Users\Mike
(or whatever your user name is). The desktop is a child of that path; e.g. C:\Users\Mike\Desktop
C:\WINDOWS\system32
, so you'd have to run cd C:\Users\Mike\Desktop
cmd
, hit Enter (you'll start in your user directory)cd Desktop
attrib -r "the_folder_name_where_your_drawings_are_stored_on_your_desktop\*.*" /s /d
attrib -r -h -s "the_folder_name_where_your_drawings_are_stored_on_your_desktop\*.*" /s /d
C:\Users\Mike\Desktop
attrib -r "the_folder_name_what_your_drawings_are_stored_on_your_desktop\*.*" /s /d
attrib -r -h -s "the_folder_name_where_your_drawings_are_stored_on_your_desktop\*.*" /s /d
That's a good suggestion (I hadn't come across that feature). Though; if it's been enabled by accident, then wouldn't DraftSight be completely prevented from writing to the folder? Or if it'd been whitelisted then it wouldn't be complaining? I.e. it would either work or it wouldn't; it wouldn't complain then work.This is sounding more like controlled folder access being on. If you give the following sequence a try:
Windows Key+i > Update & Security > Windows Security > Virus and threat protection > Manage Settings under Virus and threat protection Settings > Manage Controlled Folder access > Toggle off Controlled Folder access
Windows is making defender a bit more aggressive which makes it more effective but gives quirks.That's a good suggestion (I hadn't come across that feature). Though; if it's been enabled by accident, then wouldn't DraftSight be completely prevented from writing to the folder? Or if it'd been whitelisted then it wouldn't be complaining? I.e. it would either work or it wouldn't; it wouldn't complain then work.
It's definitely a weird issue. The fact it thinks the file(s) being opened are already in use would definitely point to temporary files (possibly left due to the program or computer crashing while a file was open), but that's already been checked.Windows is making defender a bit more aggressive which makes it more effective but gives quirks.
i have the same question as you if the folders are marked as read only how is draftsight allowing Mike to edit and then save docs to that path?
If using command line to reset the attributes as an admin is being undone that would suggest something at a Windows system level is redoing it.
IMO Windows 7 was about the pinnacle in terms of usability and stability (from Microsoft). Windows 10 is probably (just) better than 8, but the near impossibility of preventing Windows Update from merrily rebooting a machine while it's in use is infuriating. The problem (for me) with Linux is that a large number of the programs I run are not available on that platform. I'd consider running MacOS, but don't really want to spend (lots of) money on Apple hardware.I used to be told that people would not use Unix instead of Windows because it was too complicated. Every iteration of Windows appears to have got more complex and has more issues "designed' into it. So far I have managed to avoid Windows 10 and when I get to the stage of needing it I think I may go completely Apple and/or a Unix variant on another machine as well.
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