May 14

This is straight from the department of “I wish I had known this before so I wouldn’t have Carpal Tunnel Syndrome today.”

You know  how on Windows XP, you could copy a big directory tree from one directory/drive/machine and sometimes the copy doesn’t complete.  Maybe your Wi-Fi cut out during the large copy.  You’re left with the task of re-starting the entire copy operation.

Or perhaps you just want to do a copy of one set of files over another set of files but only care about creating new files, not updating changed files.

Then you have surely faced the Confirm File Replace dialog numerous times because of all the existing files.  But are you going to click “No” every single motherf’in time?  In the past, I just clicked “Yes to all”–even if that was just a waste of the computer’s time, my own time wasn’t wasted and I could do something else like write poetry.

But actually, there is a hidden option “No to All”,  as explained by LifeHacker.  You just hold the SHIFT key and click the “No” button in the Confirm File Replace dialog.

4 Responses to ““No to all” replace option during copying of files in Windows XP”

  1. Jub says:

    Too late, I’m a mac now !
    But I wish I had learned this one earlier :)

  2. GM says:

    Doesn’t work for me. Stuck hitting $@#$@#$ ‘No’ 10,000 times. Stupid Windows.

  3. Manu says:

    I love you!
    I almost have Carpal Tunnel Syndrome now, but beter late than never.

    I miss the old MS-DOS PC-Tools. There was the option to “Replace only if new”

    Why is Microsoft stepping downwards in such a simple but quotidian thing?

  4. A.janakiraman says:

    thank your very much, you saved my time.

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