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Monday, May 19, 2014

Copy, Move, and Create Shortcuts in Windows With Drag-and-Drop


Copy, Move, and Create Shortcuts in Windows With Drag-and-Drop

You probably know you can move a file by dragging and dropping it to a new location. By pressing down a key on your keyboard, you can also copy it or create a shortcut with that same drag-and-drop motion.


In Windows, dragging and dropping a file will perform the default task—usually moving. However, holding down a certain key will perform different actions:



  • Ctrl+Drag will copy the file

  • Shift+Drag will move the file (in situations where copy is the default—like when you're dragging a file between two different drives)

  • Alt+Drag will create a shortcut to the file in the new location


You may have known one or two of these, but they can all come in handy (I somehow never knew about Alt+Drag). And, as we've mentioned before, you can get even more options if you drag with a right-click—including options for 7-Zip, if you have it installed.


Windows 7: No Way to Duplicate a File in Win7? | Seven Forums via @ksurl


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