Switcher Hangout The place for switchers to discuss their new machines, and how to work with OS X. General support can be had here for newbie stuff, like "How do I restart my new iMac?" :)

Document Files / Personal Files


Post Reply New Thread Subscribe

 
Thread Tools
The Badger

 
Member Since: Jan 10, 2007
Location: York
Posts: 20
The Badger is on a distinguished road
Mac Specs: MacBook

The Badger is offline
Hi, I am extremely new to macs.
It maybe silly but i've got a question regarding the Documents Folder in my user area.

Where do I save my personal documents (e.g. word, excel, pp, etc)? Can I group the app files in documents into 1 folder?
Can I create another folder at the same level of the tree as documents and chuck all my personal crap in there??

Cheers to all those who reply.

Woof
QUOTE Thanks
eric

 
eric's Avatar
 
Member Since: Nov 04, 2006
Location: twin cities, mn, usa
Posts: 8,800
eric has a reputation beyond reputeeric has a reputation beyond reputeeric has a reputation beyond reputeeric has a reputation beyond reputeeric has a reputation beyond reputeeric has a reputation beyond reputeeric has a reputation beyond reputeeric has a reputation beyond reputeeric has a reputation beyond reputeeric has a reputation beyond reputeeric has a reputation beyond repute

eric is offline
i just create various folders within the documents folder to contain anything pretty much not a video, picture, or music file. do whatever you'd like in those folders, they're yours!

also, if you create a folder, say, within documents called "mac stuff", you can drag that folder to the area on the bottom left to create a "shortcut" to that folder. you could also drag a folder to the dock and it will create a shortcut there as well.

Please participate in our Member of the Month polls. Every vote counts! And remember to use the user reputation system!
["Dear Homer, I. O. U. one emergency donut. Signed, Homer." - Note by Homer Simpson]
QUOTE Thanks
yogi

 
yogi's Avatar
 
Member Since: Jan 14, 2005
Location: St. Gallen, Switzerland
Posts: 1,973
yogi is a name known to allyogi is a name known to allyogi is a name known to allyogi is a name known to allyogi is a name known to allyogi is a name known to allyogi is a name known to all
Mac Specs: iMac Core i5, iPad, iPhone 4

yogi is offline
You can create a folder virtually anywhere on your mac, even in the system's restricted are, if you use your password. Macs are flexible that way, bt very safe so they keep you from doing crap.

If you liked this post, consider using the Reputation System.
QUOTE Thanks
egandolfi

 
Member Since: Jan 19, 2007
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 130
egandolfi will become famous soon enough
Mac Specs: MacBook Pro-2.16Ghz Intel Core 2 Duo-3GB RAM-120GB HDD

egandolfi is offline
I just started using a Mac less then a week ago. Similar to Eric, I have used the documents folder as well as the movie, music and pictures folders within my home folder. However under the Documents folder I created a word and excel folder for those respective file types. Also any program installations I download I save in a folder called Software that I created at the root of my home folder.

I am trying to keep it fairly consistent with the way I had it organized on my PC.
QUOTE Thanks
MacHeadCase
Guest
 
Posts: n/a

You shouldn't. Mac OS X has a different structure and behaviour. The more you mess with what comes natural to Mac OS X, the more problems you risk getting in the long run.
QUOTE Thanks
egandolfi

 
Member Since: Jan 19, 2007
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 130
egandolfi will become famous soon enough
Mac Specs: MacBook Pro-2.16Ghz Intel Core 2 Duo-3GB RAM-120GB HDD

egandolfi is offline
Are you saying that you should not freely create folders to organize your data under your home folder and to just use the Documents, Movies, Music, and Pictures folders?
QUOTE Thanks
MacHeadCase
Guest
 
Posts: n/a

Just don't try to bend Mac OS X into being Windows is what I'm saying. They are not the same.

Mac OS X comes from Unix/BSD which are highly structured in their ways, just like Windows is. You can't ask one to be the other, in their structure or behaviour.

Last edited by MacHeadCase; 01-20-2007 at 12:00 PM.
QUOTE Thanks
egandolfi

 
Member Since: Jan 19, 2007
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 130
egandolfi will become famous soon enough
Mac Specs: MacBook Pro-2.16Ghz Intel Core 2 Duo-3GB RAM-120GB HDD

egandolfi is offline
I am aware of that. I guess I just don't follow how creating your own file structure under your personal folder is "bending" Mac OS X into Windows. If the OS gives a place to put all of your own data (which is what I thought the personal folder is for) what's the point of storing any data in it?
QUOTE Thanks
MacHeadCase
Guest
 
Posts: n/a

Your user account should store files as in documents. Other stuff like software installations or applications should go in the Applications folder. Unless you mean to say these are installer files such as .dmg.

If that is the case then why not burn those installers on CDs or DVDs so you don't clog up your hard drive extra fast? That's what I do anyhow.
QUOTE Thanks
mac57

 
mac57's Avatar
 
Member Since: Apr 29, 2006
Location: St. Somewhere
Posts: 4,547
mac57 has a brilliant futuremac57 has a brilliant futuremac57 has a brilliant futuremac57 has a brilliant futuremac57 has a brilliant futuremac57 has a brilliant futuremac57 has a brilliant futuremac57 has a brilliant futuremac57 has a brilliant futuremac57 has a brilliant futuremac57 has a brilliant future
Mac Specs: PowerMac G5 Quad, 2.5 GHz, 4 Core, 120 GB SSD, 500 GB HDD

mac57 is offline
Basically, this is a question of how YOU like to organize things so that YOU can easily retrieve them. Pretty much, I try to follow the general organizational rules that Mac OS X sets up - I keep my music in my home's Music folder, my photography stuff in the Pictures folder, my videos in the Movies folder, my web site source pages in the Sites folder, and then EVERYTHING else in the Documents folder.

In the Documents folder though, I have deep many layered hierarchy, organized by topic vs. by file type. So, for example I have a folder where I keep applications specific notes, another where I keep Mac information in general, another where I keep all my older Linux info and so on...

It is really up to you. However, as MacHeadCase points out, following the Mac way, vs. trying to bend your Mac to the PC way, will generally make life easier.

My Macs: PowerMac G5 Quad, 2.5 GHz, 4 Core, Mac Pro, 3.2 GHz 8 Core, Power Macintosh 7500/100
My iStuff: 32 GB iPhone 4, 30 GB iPod Video, 16 GB iPod Touch
My OS': Mac OS X Tiger, Mac OS X Snow Leopard, Mac OS X Leopard, Mac OS 8.6, openSUSE 10.3, Win XP
I was on the Mac-Forums honor roll for September 2007
QUOTE Thanks
egandolfi

 
Member Since: Jan 19, 2007
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 130
egandolfi will become famous soon enough
Mac Specs: MacBook Pro-2.16Ghz Intel Core 2 Duo-3GB RAM-120GB HDD

egandolfi is offline
MacHeadCase,I store the .dmg files in a software folder so if for some reason I need to reinstall something I have it. I'll wait till I have a bunch of then to burn to CD. As for the actual installations of programs, I put them in the Applications folder. I think our thoughts are the same but I just explain it in a PC-centric way and you in a Mac-centric way.
QUOTE Thanks
MacHeadCase
Guest
 
Posts: n/a

Ok gotcha you now. Thought you meant you installed applications (software) in your home directory and forced the system to work from there with the software you installed. :girl:
QUOTE Thanks
Stephan936

 
Stephan936's Avatar
 
Member Since: Jan 01, 2007
Location: Montréal
Posts: 59
Stephan936 is on a distinguished road
Mac Specs: 17" MBP, 2.33GHz, 100GB@7200rpm

Stephan936 is offline
Oh... you have to keep those .dmg files? What for, is it just in case you need to reinstall the program?
QUOTE Thanks
yogi

 
yogi's Avatar
 
Member Since: Jan 14, 2005
Location: St. Gallen, Switzerland
Posts: 1,973
yogi is a name known to allyogi is a name known to allyogi is a name known to allyogi is a name known to allyogi is a name known to allyogi is a name known to allyogi is a name known to all
Mac Specs: iMac Core i5, iPad, iPhone 4

yogi is offline
You don't have to keep them, in fact, I throw away all of them. Most of my DMGs are downloaded from the internet, I have a fairly speedy connection at 4 Mbps, so I just redownload in case I ever need the DMG again.

If you liked this post, consider using the Reputation System.
QUOTE Thanks
nukemm

 
nukemm's Avatar
 
Member Since: Dec 15, 2006
Location: Oak Harbor, WA
Posts: 925
nukemm is a jewel in the roughnukemm is a jewel in the roughnukemm is a jewel in the rough
Mac Specs: 2.33Ghz Core2Duo MacBook Pro /// 2.2Ghz Core2Duo MacBook

nukemm is offline
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stephan936 View Post
Oh... you have to keep those .dmg files? What for, is it just in case you need to reinstall the program?
A .dmg file is the Mac equivalent (more or less) to a setup.exe file on a PC. However, most Mac applications don't require an install, just a drag and drop of the program within the .dmg into your Applications folder. If your Mac dies and you have to reload OS X, you'll want these .dmg files to install your programs.


Don't forget to use the reputation system!
My Setup
QUOTE Thanks

Post Reply New Thread Subscribe


« US Flag in upper menu bar inbetween wireless and volume icons | Can widgets stay on the desktop? »
Thread Tools

Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
List view vs. Icon view - can't see all files =^o.o^= Switcher Hangout 8 01-20-2007 06:39 PM
Files Lost during Profile Move SITF OS X - Operating System 0 10-17-2006 03:54 PM
Problems copying files... PC to Mac... ps zburd Running Windows (or anything else) on your Mac 0 10-10-2005 02:10 PM
repair permissions a waste of time? Macman Schweb's Lounge 5 05-31-2005 06:26 PM
SOS: My iBook's Files and Personal Settings Missin tettyusa Apple Notebooks 1 07-21-2004 12:03 PM

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:57 PM.

Powered by vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
X

Welcome to Mac-Forums.com

Create your username to jump into the discussion!

New members like you have made this community the ultimate source for your Mac since 2003!


(4 digit year)

Already a member?