Spyke

Been using Linux as my primary OS for (counts on fingers)... decades now. Called them folders the whole time. Never had a problem with it. Nobody who matters cares.

92

Until now, i care a ton!
Oh wait, "Nobody who matters"
dang, nevermind

20

In parlance I have found you can say 'what directory is that folder in?' If you want to have a user give you a full path.

1
lemmy.world

I typically call them folders when going through the GUI and directories when using CLI.

87
lemmy.world

I never realized I subconsciously did this until your pointing it out. Huh. Thanks for that insight I suppose, haha

34

well it sorta just makes sense, the gui presents it as a folder, you can move things around in it like a folder, conceptually it presents them in a way to make you think they are physical things stored in a physical folder/box. cli it really just feels like you are using a string of characters indicating the desired file, it feels more like a directory that way, even if it always really is that way, just showcased differently in the gui.

brain doing brainy things, strings/lines vs pictures/labels

7

To move a folder (gui), you just do it. To move a directory (cli) you have to implicitly say you want the contents too.

3
lemmy.zip

meh. folder is 2 syllables, directory is like 4. I'm lazy. If someone gave me a clear one syllable alternative that others would know what I meant (even if while cringing), i'd probably start using that instead. I've tried just "dir", but no one ever knows wtf i'm saying.

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lemmy.world

Yep, while this meme is funny and in jest. If someone actually seriously gave me shit for saying "folder" or "directory" I would have to ask them what Stallman's toe nails actually taste like. Because that is up there with his level of being rigid about something that I just can't stand.

15

I do agree, but I do double check how I wrote and what I wrote when replying on GitHub 😁.

2
0x4E4Freply
sh.itjust.works

While conversing with Linux users, they should know what dir means... I mean, even if they don't use the terminal that often, dir is often used in GUIs as well in Linux.

2
Crozekielreply
lemmy.zip

I might should clarify that when using "dir" verbally no one knows what I'm saying, but maybe how I pronounce it in my head isn't how everyone else does, lol. In text it's plenty clear, imo.

1
slrpnk.net

The real hard Linux nerds will just call them files

35

You just put in my head an idea for the most boring "real or cake" spin-off imaginable

2

Idk about hierarchy but PATH is a thing and the proper terminology is filepath, so the word path becomes ambiguated as it could be used to refer to either. Hence why I say it is bad practice to use it as a primary reference in conversation. Otherwise you'll get interns and users modifying their PATH for no damn reason and wondering why nothing works.

2
lemmy.world

So what's the difference?

My intuition is that directory is the older term and refers to something existing on the file system while folder can be that but also includes "virtual folders" that group together different files from across the file system like when photo manager shows you categories like 'recently viewed' or 'taken in 2023'.

20
lemmy.world

Directory is the older term, but when they started making computers user friendly they needed a friendlier word for it. Folders make sense because people understand putting files in folders in real life.

7
takeheartreply
lemmy.world

Aha, to me it's an apt metaphors as files go into folders and it fits with the whole desktop analogy.

3

Exactly, except like all computer metaphors they break down when you get into the details. I can't put a document in more than one folder and update them at the same time IRL like I can do with a symlink.

2

You bring up a pretty good point. Whenever I have a personal document that could go into multiple categories (eg a travel insurance certificate can go into travel, insurance, or finance folder) I place it in all 3 at once with hard links. What's more is that if I intuitively first search for a document in place A but it's actually in place B I simply place a link in A for the next time.

Before I learned a bit about file systems I didn't even conceive of such a thing being possible; precisely because the folder metaphor had imprinted upon me the physical world constraint that things can only be in a single place at once.

3
lemmy.blahaj.zone

Uhhh directories are files where other files are stored in a computer, folders are pieces of paper used to store pieces of paper (or a file used to store another files in a computer)

6
festntreply
sh.itjust.works

folders are only considered files in linux, in windows, its a mess

17
kamenokoreply
sh.itjust.works

A directory outside of computing is simply a list of items with a common characteristic. A list of names at an apartment building for example.

13
4amreply

And on a CLI a directory is just a list of other files.

1
lemmy.world

everything in my home directory is a folder, everything outside of that is a directory

19
Sethayyreply
sh.itjust.works

And interestingly enough the home directory itself falls outside of itself

6
toynbeereply
lemmy.world

Given that cd is "change directory," I assume cf is meant to be "change folder."

11
lemmy.ca

Yes and it’s telling the computer to treat cf as if it was cd

5

It's interesting that Windows also uses cd, even though they call them folders 😂.

1
  • Air Directory

That actually sounds like a great name for a cloud service, lol

1
lemmy.world

Meh, I dont care. If they used a word that wasn't directly linked to the concept then I might care.

13

Likewise, we all know what it means, regardless if you say it like this or that.

2

I mix and match. I used to have an Amiga back in the day, and they were called directories there. As such, most of my parlance is from those days. But most of my work life has been on Windows. So, folder has sneaked into everyday usage.

11
ian
feddit.uk

Directory means a listing. You are referring to the list of names of some items.

I'm usually working with folders that actually contain files and other folders. It's often closed, so the content is not shown. A folder is a container.

Wikipedia clarifies this difference.

A telephone directory does not contain telephones.

7

Go down that path and it's all binary. But users deal with metaphors. And containers are very useful.

1
lemmy.zip

I switched to Linux only about a year ago. I frequently called them directories even in Windows. I sometimes use folder too, but usually directory I think.

4

Oddly enough this made me realise I solely use directory for windows, I think cause windows uses dir instead of ls and cd is used in both lmao

3

it's directory, if you refer to it in a cli context and folder if you refer to it in a gui context

2
danreply
upvote.au

Discord? For Linux communities? Linux communities usually like to stick to non-proprietary solutions.

4
lemmy.world

I have been switching a number of computers over to Linux over the last few months in preparation for the end of Windows 10. But honestly shit like this that makes me think, maybe Windows 11 isn't so bad?

-12
NeatNitreply
discuss.tchncs.de

Have you ever actually seen someone care about that particular choice of terminology, without being sarcastic trying to be funny?

14
accideathreply
lemmy.world

What terminology do Apple users passionately care about?

2

I mean, calling them Mac(Book) does clarify that they run macOS. And historically „Mac and PC“ have been used to differentiate between Windows and macOS, not just by Mac users. Never met anyone who persisted on MacBooks not being laptops. People just call them MacBooks because that’s what they are…

3
optionalreply
feddit.de

TBF, most of the time (with a small exception for the period from 2006 to 2020ish) it would have been wrong to call a Mac a PC, as PC (and PC compatible) is the name of a specific platform based on the 8086 and compatible processors with a specific BIOS and a specific IO-interfaces. And Mac's most of the time are not PC compatible. And I've never heard anyone say, that a MacBook is not a laptop.

1
cobysevreply
lemmy.world

As an IT guy in the early 2000s, it was really annoying to see all the "Mac vs. PC" arguments. PC stands for Personal Computer - a Mac is literally a PC! When I was a kid in the '80s-'90s, my schools all used Apple IIe computers (and later versions of Apple products as I got older), but they always called them PCs.

But those Apple ads convincing people to ditch the frumpy old guy PC for the young, hot Mac guy did their job, and pop culture decided that a Mac wasn't a PC.

1

PC stands for Personal Computer, but that doesn't mean that every personal computer is a PC. Just as VW stands for Volkswagen but not every wagon used by folks is a VW.

Calling any personal computer PC would cause all sorts of confusion, as PCs are able to run specific pieces of software (which were literally marketed as »PC 3,5"«, »PC CD ROM« or something of the like) such as »PC (or MS) DOS«, Windows etc. It would have been pretty annoying if someone sold you a game, telling you that it runs on PCs, leaving it to you to guess which kind of personal computer they meant: Atari ST, Apple II, C64, or IBM PC. All of them are personal computers, but only the PC is a PC.

Btw, all that was set in stone already in the 1980s and 1990, decades before Apple launched the Mac Vs. PC campaign in 2006. If your teacher called an Apple IIe PC, he was wrong about that, even before it was cool.

0

Tired of users' elitism? Get some corporate elitism instead!

What's wrong babe? We've just moved your taskbar, created one another directories for program files and documents, and renamed This Computer to Our Computer. It's not a big deal!

4