ECommerce-Guide provides ecommerce business owners with e-commerce news, hardware and software reviews and tutorials, online business solutions and information about PayPal and how to sell on eBay   News, reviews and practical solutions for your online business  
Home News & Trends Solutions Resources eBiz FAQ Selling on eBay Forums Products Glossary About

Search
ECommerce-Guide

Search internet.com

Become a Marketplace Partner



ECommerce Glossary
Enter a Term:

Free Newsletters
ECommerce-Guide Daily
html

Small Business Computing

WinPlanet

Webopedia

E-mail Offers

Newsletter Address Changes

internet.commerce
Be a Commerce Partner













internet.com
IT
Developer
Internet News
Small Business
Personal Technology
International

Search internet.com
Advertise
Corporate Info
Newsletters
Tech Jobs
E-mail Offers


Enter a keyword...
 
...or choose a category.
 

directory
Last modified: Thursday, March 04, 2004  

directory tree
(1) An organizational unit, or container, used to organize folders and files into a hierarchical structure. Directories contain bookkeeping information about files that are, figuratively speaking, beneath them in the hierarchy. You can think of a directory as a file cabinet that contains folders that contain files. Many graphical user interfaces use the term folder instead of directory.

Computer manuals often describe directories and file structures in terms of an inverted tree. The files and directories at any level are contained in the directory above them. To access a file, you may need to specify the names of all the directories above it. You do this by specifying a path.

The topmost directory in any file is called the root directory. A directory that is below another directory is called a subdirectory. A directory above a subdirectory is called the parent directory. Under DOS and Windows, the root directory is a back slash (\).

To read information from, or write information into, a directory, you must use an operating system command. You cannot directly edit directory files. For example, the DIR command in DOS reads a directory file and displays its contents.

(2) In networks, a database of network resources, such as e-mail addresses. See under directory service.

 
Related Categories

File Management

Networks


Related Terms

access control

ACL

BPDU

DEN

file

file management system

folder

hierarchical

journaled file system

link farming

path

root directory

STP

tree structure

 




JupiterOnlineMedia

internet.comearthweb.comDevx.commediabistro.comGraphics.com

Search:

Jupitermedia Corporation has two divisions: Jupiterimages and JupiterOnlineMedia

Jupitermedia Corporate Info


Legal Notices, Licensing, Reprints, & Permissions, Privacy Policy.

Advertise | Newsletters | Tech Jobs | Shopping | E-mail Offers