Dette websted vil have begrænset funktionalitet, mens vi gennemgår vedligeholdelse for at forbedre din oplevelse. Hvis en artikel ikke løser dit problem, og du vil stille et spørgsmål, har vi vores supportfællesskab, der venter på at hjælpe dig på @FirefoxSupport på Twitter og/r/firefox på Reddit.

Søg i Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Læs mere

A folder name error shut down copies to a new folder. How to fix?

  • 4 svar
  • 1 har dette problem
  • 28 visninger
  • Seneste svar af Zenos

more options

I created a new folder then tried copying some other folders. But one of the subfolders being copied contained a "." in the name. This caused a copy error and disabled the new folder (under Archives). All copying to Archives is now blocked. I tried clicking on Properties | General Info | Repair Folder, but this did nothing. (TB 24.1.1 on Win 7, Gateway 64-bit).

I created a new folder then tried copying some other folders. But one of the subfolders being copied contained a "." in the name. This caused a copy error and disabled the new folder (under Archives). All copying to Archives is now blocked. I tried clicking on Properties | General Info | Repair Folder, but this did nothing. (TB 24.1.1 on Win 7, Gateway 64-bit).

Alle svar (4)

more options

moving to the Thunderbird product queue

more options

the-edmeister What happened? Was part of your reply cut off? I don't know what the "product queue" means. Does it mean I need to look somewhere else for the answer?

Lloyd

more options

OK. I see that I posted the question under "Firefox". Sorry.

more options

The folders you see in Thunderbird are stored as files in your filesystem, so their names are obliged to comply with the file system's rules for file names. So periods, slashes, asterisks etc are disallowed, or if not actually forbidden, may give unexpected effects, as you have found. For instance, in windows and linux, "." means "this folder" and ".." means "this folder's parent folder".

Unfortunately Thunderbird doesn't try to validate folder names and doesn't warn you if you've created a name including any special characters.

So, bearing this in mind, make a note of the broken folder names as they appear in Thunderbird. Go to Help|Troubleshooting Information in Thunderbird, find "Profile directory" and click on "Open directory".

Now close Thunderbird.

Then, referring to your notes about the broken folder names, look through your profile and see if you can identify problematic file/folder names and repair them.