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  3. Is this a little bug in Windows 7?

Is this a little bug in Windows 7?

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  • S supernorb

    I've inadvertently discovered this when trying renaming my file from 'maledefault' to 'maleDefault' and I couldn't rename it. Just capitalize the letter d, I think there is no case-sensitive string comparison here and tried renaming 'maledefault' to a different one (anything except Maledefault, mAledefault, MAledefault,...) then renamed that one to 'maleDefault'. Wow, I had to rename it indirectly. Is that a little annoying? Or there is some option which I don't know, to make the OS work properly as I want. Here is an instruction for renaming lowercase letters to uppercase letters (or vice versa) in Windows 7 (I'm not sure about others): To rename a -> A , you can't do it normally, just follow the following steps: 1. Rename a -> b (or c, d, or any other but a and A). 2. Rename b -> A 3. Enjoy. :laugh: Any idea?

    T Offline
    T Offline
    Tomz_KV
    wrote on last edited by
    #26

    I did not encounter any issue with renaming. My version is win7 ultimate.

    TOMZ_KV

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • S supernorb

      I've inadvertently discovered this when trying renaming my file from 'maledefault' to 'maleDefault' and I couldn't rename it. Just capitalize the letter d, I think there is no case-sensitive string comparison here and tried renaming 'maledefault' to a different one (anything except Maledefault, mAledefault, MAledefault,...) then renamed that one to 'maleDefault'. Wow, I had to rename it indirectly. Is that a little annoying? Or there is some option which I don't know, to make the OS work properly as I want. Here is an instruction for renaming lowercase letters to uppercase letters (or vice versa) in Windows 7 (I'm not sure about others): To rename a -> A , you can't do it normally, just follow the following steps: 1. Rename a -> b (or c, d, or any other but a and A). 2. Rename b -> A 3. Enjoy. :laugh: Any idea?

      P Offline
      P Offline
      ProgmanEx
      wrote on last edited by
      #27

      test on Win8, no this bug.

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • S supernorb

        I've inadvertently discovered this when trying renaming my file from 'maledefault' to 'maleDefault' and I couldn't rename it. Just capitalize the letter d, I think there is no case-sensitive string comparison here and tried renaming 'maledefault' to a different one (anything except Maledefault, mAledefault, MAledefault,...) then renamed that one to 'maleDefault'. Wow, I had to rename it indirectly. Is that a little annoying? Or there is some option which I don't know, to make the OS work properly as I want. Here is an instruction for renaming lowercase letters to uppercase letters (or vice versa) in Windows 7 (I'm not sure about others): To rename a -> A , you can't do it normally, just follow the following steps: 1. Rename a -> b (or c, d, or any other but a and A). 2. Rename b -> A 3. Enjoy. :laugh: Any idea?

        R Offline
        R Offline
        RafagaX
        wrote on last edited by
        #28

        It's not a bug it's a feature... in case you may have wrongly pressed the Shift or Caps Lock key... ;P

        CEO at: - Rafaga Systems - Para Facturas - Modern Components for the moment...

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        • S supernorb

          I've inadvertently discovered this when trying renaming my file from 'maledefault' to 'maleDefault' and I couldn't rename it. Just capitalize the letter d, I think there is no case-sensitive string comparison here and tried renaming 'maledefault' to a different one (anything except Maledefault, mAledefault, MAledefault,...) then renamed that one to 'maleDefault'. Wow, I had to rename it indirectly. Is that a little annoying? Or there is some option which I don't know, to make the OS work properly as I want. Here is an instruction for renaming lowercase letters to uppercase letters (or vice versa) in Windows 7 (I'm not sure about others): To rename a -> A , you can't do it normally, just follow the following steps: 1. Rename a -> b (or c, d, or any other but a and A). 2. Rename b -> A 3. Enjoy. :laugh: Any idea?

          P Offline
          P Offline
          patbob
          wrote on last edited by
          #29

          When I was a kid, we had to make all our file names in upper case, and that's the way we liked it! :) This "feature" was brought to you by the wonders of legacy compatability. DOS only did upper case in the beginning. Then later, lower case was allowed, and at that point it was decided to not confuse users too much by allowing case to matter in file names. Today... Unix, on the other hand, was case sensitive from day one.

          We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.

          B 1 Reply Last reply
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          • P patbob

            When I was a kid, we had to make all our file names in upper case, and that's the way we liked it! :) This "feature" was brought to you by the wonders of legacy compatability. DOS only did upper case in the beginning. Then later, lower case was allowed, and at that point it was decided to not confuse users too much by allowing case to matter in file names. Today... Unix, on the other hand, was case sensitive from day one.

            We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.

            B Offline
            B Offline
            Bruce Patin
            wrote on last edited by
            #30

            I had to teach people coding in a language (REXX) where lower case had become acceptable and advisable for legibility, and suggested to my students that they should use the small letters, because they used less storage space than the large letters. ;-)

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            • D dusty_dex

              No, it's not a bug. Windows doesn't (didn't) differentiate upper-case and lower-case names. It can be enabled in the registry. Has something to do with POSIX compliance as I recall. HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager\kernel\ Value Name: ObCaseInsensitive Type: DWORD Value: 0 There's also a bug when installing/uninstalling .Net framework 2.0 which affect case insensitivity setting.

              "It's true that hard work never killed anyone. But I figure, why take the chance." - Ronald Reagan That's what machines are for. Got a problem? Sleep on it.

              J Offline
              J Offline
              jibalt
              wrote on last edited by
              #31

              Whoosh! Yes, we know that Windows is case-insensitive, but that's not the point here.

              D 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • J jibalt

                Whoosh! Yes, we know that Windows is case-insensitive, but that's not the point here.

                D Offline
                D Offline
                dusty_dex
                wrote on last edited by
                #32

                The OP wasn't aware of this when it was originally posted. So since then he's modified his message, which makes my original reply look redundant.

                "It's true that hard work never killed anyone. But I figure, why take the chance." - Ronald Reagan That's what machines are for. Got a problem? Sleep on it.

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                • S supernorb

                  I've inadvertently discovered this when trying renaming my file from 'maledefault' to 'maleDefault' and I couldn't rename it. Just capitalize the letter d, I think there is no case-sensitive string comparison here and tried renaming 'maledefault' to a different one (anything except Maledefault, mAledefault, MAledefault,...) then renamed that one to 'maleDefault'. Wow, I had to rename it indirectly. Is that a little annoying? Or there is some option which I don't know, to make the OS work properly as I want. Here is an instruction for renaming lowercase letters to uppercase letters (or vice versa) in Windows 7 (I'm not sure about others): To rename a -> A , you can't do it normally, just follow the following steps: 1. Rename a -> b (or c, d, or any other but a and A). 2. Rename b -> A 3. Enjoy. :laugh: Any idea?

                  M Offline
                  M Offline
                  Member 4608898
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #33

                  It has been like that since the Windows 95 days

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • S supernorb

                    If it's by design, I really admire those ones who designed it that way. In fact, I bet there are many others who don't know about this 'feature' in Windows. (I've used Windows for 10 years but I just knew this a few days ago by accident.

                    K Offline
                    K Offline
                    KP Lee
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #34

                    By the way, since English isn't your first language, when Richard says 3.1 days, he isn't talking about last week, but when MS introduced Windows version 3.1. Actually, if I remember correctly you could change the case when requesting a file in Dos 1.0 days. At that point in time it was REALLY strict on file naming conventions. I don't recall ever just changing the case of the name of a file, so I wouldn't have noticed that difference before either and I'm also assuming that you were looking at the listing on Windows explorer instead of opening a cmd file and executing dir.

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                    • S supernorb

                      I've inadvertently discovered this when trying renaming my file from 'maledefault' to 'maleDefault' and I couldn't rename it. Just capitalize the letter d, I think there is no case-sensitive string comparison here and tried renaming 'maledefault' to a different one (anything except Maledefault, mAledefault, MAledefault,...) then renamed that one to 'maleDefault'. Wow, I had to rename it indirectly. Is that a little annoying? Or there is some option which I don't know, to make the OS work properly as I want. Here is an instruction for renaming lowercase letters to uppercase letters (or vice versa) in Windows 7 (I'm not sure about others): To rename a -> A , you can't do it normally, just follow the following steps: 1. Rename a -> b (or c, d, or any other but a and A). 2. Rename b -> A 3. Enjoy. :laugh: Any idea?

                      C Offline
                      C Offline
                      Chad3F
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #35

                      I've seen this "feature" as far back as XP (maybe it was 98) on FAT.

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • S supernorb

                        I've inadvertently discovered this when trying renaming my file from 'maledefault' to 'maleDefault' and I couldn't rename it. Just capitalize the letter d, I think there is no case-sensitive string comparison here and tried renaming 'maledefault' to a different one (anything except Maledefault, mAledefault, MAledefault,...) then renamed that one to 'maleDefault'. Wow, I had to rename it indirectly. Is that a little annoying? Or there is some option which I don't know, to make the OS work properly as I want. Here is an instruction for renaming lowercase letters to uppercase letters (or vice versa) in Windows 7 (I'm not sure about others): To rename a -> A , you can't do it normally, just follow the following steps: 1. Rename a -> b (or c, d, or any other but a and A). 2. Rename b -> A 3. Enjoy. :laugh: Any idea?

                        F Offline
                        F Offline
                        fulloflove
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #36

                        no. after renaming just press F5 and the name will be refreshed

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