Copying Files in Windows XP
Files, Folders
and Programs | File
Management in Windows Dialog Boxes | Windows
Explorer | Copying
Files
"Remember, if you can't find your content
when you need it - consider it lost."
Digital Workflow by Penny Ann Dolin, pg. 14
Why?
There are a number of reasons that you may want
to copy a file or have various copies of a file.
- You may want to back your files up on another
disk.
- You may want to save an old version of a file
for archiving or in case you mess up new changes.
- You may want to copy a file that has the layout
you want so you can use the layout for something else. For example,
this web page is a copy of other pages on this site. Only the text
area has been changed.
How?
The reason you copy a file has an affect on how you make the copy.
1. Backup
When you create a backup copy of a file,
you want to be sure that the backup is the latest version of the
file. You will then have two copies of the file: the working copy
and the backup.
Side Effect: The backup situation often
causes a problem if you accidentally start working in the backup
copy instead of your working copy. Then your working copy doesn't
have the latest changes. It's a bad situation when one copy has
a little bit of this, and the other copy has a little bit of that.
Never open your back up copy unless you are using it for reference
or to replace a file that is lost or corrupted.
There is a way to create a backup copy that has less chance of getting
into the backup mixup. This way is helpful because the files are not
open; so, you can't accidentally mistake an open backup copy for a
working copy. 
- Close all your programs.
- Find the file you want to copy in Windows or
in Windows Explorer.
- Click the file.
- In the panel on the left, click Copy this File.
- A window will pop up asking you where you want
to copy it too. Choose a new place. It can be another drive, such
as a CD drive or a floppy drive; or, it can be another folder on
your computer.
- Special Note about copying
an Access file: you
should use this method. Otherwise, you may only get copies of your
tables. Close your file before making your copy.
2. Archive old files
You may want to keep a copy of a file you are
going to change. This is a very good strategy, if there is any possibility
that changes you make will cause errors or make you wish you had the
original. For example, if you have a picture that you took with your
digital camera, you will want to have a copy archived before you make
changes in Photoshop.
Side
Effects: 1) The backup situation often causes a problem
if you accidentally start working in the backup copy instead of
your working copy. For example, if you take a photo and make changes
in the backup copy instead of the working copy. Then you Save your
work. Then later you open the working copy, but the changes aren't
there (because you did them in the backup copy.) So, you redo the
changes. Now, you have two files with the changes, but no original.
2) You forget to make the copy.
Make an Archive folder in My Documents.
- Inside the Archive folder, make folders that
match your working folders.
- When you first open a file, go to File -> Save
As.
- In the dialog box, open the Archive folder and
the folder that matches your working folder.
- Add a date to the file name. You will have to
use - instead of / (2-12-06 instead of 2/12/06) because Windows won't
let you use / in a file name. That will tell you the date of your
original.
- Most programs will have the archived version
open instead of your working file; so, close the file. Be sure you
know what your program does.
- Go to your working folder and reopen the file.
3. Use the formatting in a file
You may want to use the formatting you have
already set up in a file for other files. For example, this page
is formatted like most of the other pages on this web site. To use
the formatting in this page on another page, I can open this file
and save it with a new name. Then I can type in new words and add
new graphics to make the new page.
Side
Effects: When you change the formatting on one page, all
the other pages still have the old formatting. To update all the
pages with the new formatting, you will have to open all the files
and make the changes. If you use template files, all the pages
will show the formatting changes, but that is a feature in some
programs; it's not a part of Windows.
Things that go wrong when copying
to a disk.