If I have an explorer window open, is there a way to copy a file’s location, including the file name?
If I have a file, text.doc, that is in, say, G:\Folder\Folder2\SDMB, I can navigate to the folder and copy the url from the address bar in explorer, but that address doesn’t include the filename itself. Is there an easy way to get the full path itself, including the file?
Right-click on the file and select Rename. That will highlight the filename. Click on Edit, Copy, or click Ctrl-C to copy the filename to the Clipboard. The address bar should display the path, except for the filename. Add \ to the end of the path and paste the filename there. Yes, it’s awkward, but it works if you just need the exact name and location of one or two files.
Drag the file into a cmd window. Enable Quickedit in the cmd window (permamently), and you will be able to copy the full pathname with just a highlight and right-click.
This appears it will only work if the pathname + c:\ prompt total less than 80 characters, unless you also increase the values on the Layout tab for Screen Buffer Size and Windows size. If the line wraps, you can only highlight what is on one line.
Microsoft had a “Send To X” plugin in the Windows 95 Powertoys that does this, called “Send name to clipboard”. It’s one of the first things I install on a new computer.
I don’t know if it’s in the Windows XP Powertoys, but the Windows 95 version works in all versions since Windows 95. Google for it, or go to www.microsoft.com and search for it there.
Today, this link works. Get it while you can, because MS changes their URLS on a semi-random basis.
Oh, and TweakUI rocks too, but if you run Windows XP, I believe the Win XP version of TweakUI is even better.
The tool I have used for years is Ninotech Path Copy.
It provides many configuration options such as “Copy UNC path”, “Copy long path”, “Copy short path”, and “Copy filename”.
It will copy the paths/filenames of multiple files at once if desired.