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SAVE TO problems
Message
From
14/11/2001 10:28:17
 
 
To
14/11/2001 10:25:31
Charlie Schreiner
Myers and Stauffer Consulting
Topeka, Kansas, United States
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00580801
Message ID:
00581514
Views:
23
Charlie

It doesn't apply because the file is in a subdirectory, but thanks for the info anyway, that's handy to know.

Kev
>Hi Kevin,
>Since your problem is intermittent, I don't think this applies, but here goes anyway.
>Are you saving to the root directory? If so, and the drive is formatted as 16 bit FAT, and there are a lot of files already there, you could be hitting the maximum. (As happened with us recently.)
>
>http://is-it-true.org/nt/utips/utips69.shtml
>Unfortunaly the root is the ONLY directory(folder) that has a set limit on the number of files it can hold. The root is actually a table with pointers to the actual storage locations. There is no limit for the number of entries in a subdirectory. OK. OK. What is the limit? 224 used to be the magic number which is the number of entries available in the File Allocation Table (FAT) for DOS. Later this was increased to 512 for 16bit FAT and there is no limit in FAT32. NTFS also has no limit. Long file names take more than one entry. So if one is using long file names and storing them in the root directory, you will hit the 512 max very quickly even though there are significantly less than 512 entries shown in the directory listing. Just depends on how long the long file names you use.
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