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Comment by jstimpfle

7 years ago

Yes, this is how you end up with huge file paths. So don't do that. Obviously. It's not only long in storage terms. Nobody can even read it without getting dizzy.

Name it filepathlimit/filepathlimit.epub or something. Done. You can actually read that. Now if you want the prose, open the damn file. Or use the file explorer which might already show you a more complete title based on the file metadata.

And don't do that "C:\Documents and Settings\John Doe\My Documents\My Projects\Books\". There is no point in storing your things deep in a thousand rabbit holes. It's overzealous hierarchy fetishism. There is no point in creating unreadable paths that wrap around lines like wild. Use D:\Books or something. Or D:\John\Books if you must. Use basic common sense.

> So don't do that

I don't do, but I work with other people's stuff and almost every non-geek does that.

> And don't do that "C:\Documents and Settings\John Doe\My Documents\My Projects\Books\". There is no point in storing your things deep in a thousand rabbit holes

That's the standard way Windows users are meant to store their data (although I don't). What is "\home\jdoe\" on Linux is "C:\Documents and Settings\John Doe\My Documents\" on Windows ("C:\Documents and Settings\John Doe\" actually but not from an ordinary user point of view).

> It's overzealous hierarchy fetishism.

I actually find it sad we are still using hierarchies for that when we could be just using tags and semantic attributes instead (semantically a document file doesn't even need a "file name", the actual document title stored as an atribute or as a record within the file is enough and actually better). Apparently it seems ordinary people are more comfortable with the folder metaphor and hierarchies so WinFS was cancelled and 3rd party tagging and semantic desktop systems are little know.