Multiple copies of the same file leads to

  1. How do I make multiple copies of the same file? – Technical
  2. Auto Duplicate file X Times ? Solved
  3. Why Is the Same File in Two or More Places on My Machine?
  4. Multiple copies of the same file are opening
  5. The Best Duplicate File Finder for Windows
  6. Duplicate file x times in command shell
  7. Share files in Microsoft Teams


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How do I make multiple copies of the same file? – Technical

Table of Contents • • • • • • • • • • How do I make multiple copies of the same file? bat in the folder where you want to make the duplicates. Open a command prompt, go to that folder with the CD command, then type: MULTICOPY followed by the number of copies you want, then the name of the file you want to duplicate. How do I copy a bunch of files? To do this, click and hold your left mouse button on the top-left portion of where you want to start highlighting. Next, drag the box until the last file or folder is highlighted. Once the files are selected, they can be copied, cut, or dragged to another window to move them. How do I make multiple text files in Windows? • There are many ways. • Press Win+R. • In the “Open” field, type “notepad”: • Click OK. • In Notepad, type your batch file. • Click the “File” menu, then click “Save”. • Browse to wherever you want to save the batch file—your Windows desktop, for example, then in the “File name” field, type the name, ending with “. How do I make multiple copies of a Google folder? Open the Google Drive folder in your browser then press Control + a or Command + a —or drag your mouse over all of the files—to select them all. Then right-click and select Make a Copy. That will create a new copy of each of those files, right in the same folder, with Copy of before their original file name. How do I copy a folder multiple times? If you need to copy a file to multiple folders, you can hold down the Ctrl key, and drag the file or folder...

Auto Duplicate file X Times ? Solved

Unsure how to phrase or where to ask this Question. Simply, How can I set a number, for how many times i want a file to duplicate for me ? Rather than copy paste repeatedly until i get the exact number of duplicates of a file. What methods or software can I use to do this ? Example : Type in 50. Then press action, then the file in question duplicates that number of times. Done . I'd love a .bat file to do this drop it in the folder along with the file in question set a number or something . Or something in the right click context menu where such an option would appear ? Computer Type: PC/Desktop System Manufacturer/Model Number: DELL XPS 8930 OS: Windows 10 Home CPU: 64-bit Processor : 8th gen i7 8700 Memory: RAM - 16 GB . Graphics Card: Nividia Geforce GTX 1050 Ti 4GB Graphics Monitor(s) Displays: HP 32s ISP. ( No speakers ). Screen Resolution: 1920 x 1080 Keyboard: Vortex Pure PBT ( MX black silent swithces ) Mechanical Keyboard and Matias Mini Quiet Pro Mouse: One that came with the XPS tower . Hard Drives: Rotary Hard Drive. 1.81 TB Browser: Chrome and sometimes i use Edge. Antivirus: Windows 10 Defender. And ESET NOD32 Antivirus . Computer Type: Laptop System Manufacturer/Model Number: PC Specialist custom laptop Cosmos IV OS: Win 10 Pro (22H2) (2nd PC is 22H2) CPU: i3 Dual Core Processor i3-6100H Memory: 16GB HyperX IMPACT 1600MHz SODIMM DDR3 Graphics Card: NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 940M Monitor(s) Displays: 15.6" Matte Full HD IPS LED Widescreen Screen Resolution: 1920x10...

Why Is the Same File in Two or More Places on My Machine?

You delete what you think is a duplicate copy of a file over here, only to find that the original over there disappeared as well. What you’re seeing is not a duplicate copy of a file, but rather the same file appearing in more than one place. It’s common, particularly as Windows tries to “help” you locate and manage your documents. I’ll review some of the ways it “helps”. One file, three places A single file appearing in three places. (Click for larger image.) The image above shows three Windows File Explorer windows, each open on a different location: • Quick access -> Documents • This PC -> Documents • This PC -> C:\Users\LeoN\Documents As you can see, they all show the same thing: a folder (“Remote Assistance Logs”) and a text file (“A Document of Some Sort.txt”). If I were to delete the text file in any of the three, it would disappear from all three. There’s only one file. Windows is just showing it to you three different ways. Files and file listings A file is nothing more than a collection of data somewhere on the disk. A directory listing, or a listing of files in a tool like Windows File Explorer, simply points to the file. Multiple directory listings pointing to the same file. (Click for larger image.) It’s perfectly valid to have more than one pointer to the file. That means that the file — even though there is only a single instance of the file — could appear in different directory listings in different folders. Shortcuts There are several different ways 1 the ...

Multiple copies of the same file are opening

I have posted this problem here because it occurs in more than one program. It leads me to believe that there may be a system preference that I can adjust to fix it. Problem: Double-clicking a file opens it. Double-clicking it again opens a second copy of the same file, resulting in having two copies open at the same time. Shouldn't it just jump to the already-open copy of the file? So far, I have only noticed this problem when using Outlook Express and NotePad. In Outlook Express, I go to the Inbox and open an email. If I then go back to the Inbox and open the same email, it opens a second copy. My mom has had more than 20 copies of the same email open at one time without realizing it. She doesn't go to the task bar to see what is already open. That's just not how she works, and that will probably never change. In NotePad (did this used to be called WordPad?), she might want to work on her grocery list. She opens the grocery list file that she had saved previously and works on it. She checks her email. Then she returns to the grocery list by double-clicking on the file again. Now she has two copies open, but the second copy doesn't have any of the changes that she has made to the first copy because she opened the old version. If opening it again took her to the already-opened file, she would not have this problem. This is my mom's computer, running Windows XP Home Edition. I have asked other Windows users about this, and they have never experienced it. It also has never h...

The Best Duplicate File Finder for Windows

You download too much crap. Sometimes you download the same crap multiple times. Even if you need to keep those files, you don’t need two of them. To get rid of the dupes, we recommend dupeGuru. Platform: Windows Price: Free Download Page • “Fuzzy matching” algorithms can find files with identical or similar file names. • Matches across file type (i.e. matching a JPEG to an identical PNG). • Customizable filtering allows you to adjust the rules and strictness of matching. • Automatically remove empty folders during file deletion. • One-button selection to delete dupes. • Move dupes to separate folder. • Perform custom terminal commands on originals or dupes. • Specialty versions for music and picture cleanup. Of all the duplicate finders we tried out, dupeFinder was the simplest that still packed an impressive punch. To start a scan, you simply add a folder to the main window and hit “Scan.” Easy peasy. After a minute or two, you’ll get a list of all the files the app found duplicates of. The original file will be highlighted in blue, while the rest will be in black, making it easy to read the list. Once you have your dupes, you can make quick work of them. A “Dupes Only” checkbox will only show you the secondary copies to make it a little less difficult to read. You can also see the size of the files, as well as a match percentage to quickly determine just how identical a file is. You may have files that are close enough to get caught by the app, but distinct enough that ...

Duplicate file x times in command shell

Your shell code has two issues: • The echo should not be there. • The variable $i ("dollar i") is mistyped as $1 ("dollar one") in the destination file name. To make a copy of a file in the same directory as the file itself, use cp thefile thecopy If you use more than two arguments, e.g. cp thefile theotherthing thecopy then it is assumed that you'd like to copy thefile and theotherthing into the directory called thecopy. In your case with cp test.ogg echo "test$1.ogg", it specifically looks for a file called test.ogg and one named echo to copy to the directory test$1.ogg. The $1 will most likely expand to an empty string. This is why, when you delete the echo from the command, you get "test.ogg and test.ogg are the same files"; the command being executed is essentially cp test.ogg test.ogg This is probably a mistyping. In the end, you want something like this: for i in ; do cp test.ogg "test$i.ogg"; done Or, as an alternative i=0 while (( i++ /dev/null Note: This would most likely work for 100 copies, but for thousands of copies it may generate a "argument list too long" error. In that case, revert to using a loop. Short and precise /dev/null see Update as suggested by @Gilles, using tee has the defect of not preserving any file metadata. To overcome that issue, you might have to run below command after that: cp --attributes-only --preserve Source Target This is the same as two previous answers and a comment except (1) the question asks about 100, and your answer uses 10,...

Share files in Microsoft Teams

If you can access a file on your device, you can share the file with other people in Teams. This includes files (of any type) that are: • On the Files tab of your channels and chats. • In your OneDrive or other cloud storage. • On your local device. You can send the file itself or send a link to the file. Drag and drop a file into a chat If the file you want to share is available in your computer's file directory, you can drag and drop it into a message. • Go to Chat on the left side of Teams. • Select an existing conversation or start a new chat. • Drag and drop the file you want to share into the box where you type a message and select Send. All the files you share in the chat are available in the Files tab at the top of your chat. Share a file in a one-on-one or group chat • Select Attach beneath the box where you type a message, and then either OneDrive or Upload from my computer (depending on where the file is located). • Select the file and then select Share or Open. This will upload a copy of your original file. You can also upload a file by going to the Files tab and selecting Share. Share a file with your team in a channel • Select Attach beneath the box where you type your message in a channel. • Do one of the following: • Select Recent to choose a file you recently opened, and then select Upload a copy. • Select Browse Teams and Channels to choose from all the files you have access to in Teams, and then select Upload a copy or Share a link. • Select OneDrive or ...