Common shell commands for Windows 7 system (1)

  
        

The system upgrade of Windows 7 is relatively large compared to Vista, and stability, compatibility, and humanization are all comparable. The shell command line in Windows 7 is another important update that many users have not found. The Windows 7 shell is the console of the Windows 7 system. For those who are familiar with the command line, calling a program with a keyboard is faster and less laborious than a mouse. Users can use the "Shell:" command to call all the projects that can be opened with the resource manager, and the tasks that require many steps to complete, and the syntax is very simple. But many users do not know what shell commands are, and the operations that can be implemented, then we will fully analyze the common shell commands under Win7 to help users understand the new commands under the new system.

shell:Profile

This command opens the user's general directory. In the case of a regular installation, the location is c:\\users\\username. You can also access it by clicking on the user name on the system start menu. It can also be accessed through the system environment variable %userprofile%.

shell:Personal

This command opens the current user's document folder. You can also access it by clicking My Documents in the Start menu.

shell:SendTo

This command can access the system "send to" folder. If you enter your personal folder, you will find that this folder is hidden. If you try to double-click it, an error message will be displayed, which can be accessed normally through the shell command. This is because this shortcut is actually a jump entry, created for backward compatibility. The real SendTo folder is hidden in several subfolders under the AppData folder.

shell:Public

This command opens a public shared folder. If you use the family group feature, this command can be first information within a window.

shell:Common Startup and shell:Startup

This command shows which programs will start automatically when the system starts. Sometimes a shortcut is automatically created in the startup menu when the program is installed.

shell:ConnectionsFolder

This command displays the current network connection. This command should be the quickest way to view current network connections. The usual method is to click on Network and Sharing Center and then select Change Adapter Settings to view.

shell:programs and shell:Common Programs

These two commands can access the list of programs in the current user and system user start menus.

shell:AppData and shell:Local AppData

These two commands can open the Roaming Application Data Local Application Data. These two folders are not commonly used in everyday applications. You can find that applications like Firefox store configuration information in this folder.

shell:Cookies and shell:cache

These two commands are the quickest way to view Internet Explorer's stored information.

shell:Profile

The root directory of the currently logged in user

shell:UsersFilesFolder

The same as shell:profile

shell:Personal

My Documents folder for the currently logged in user

shell:My Music

My Music folder for the currently logged in user

Shell:My Pictures

My Pictures folder of the currently logged in user

shell:My Video

My Video folder of the currently logged in user
>

shell:Contacts

Contact folder for currently logged in user

shell:Desktop

Current login user's desktop folder

shell :Downloads

Download folder for currently logged in users

shell:Favorites

Internet Explorer browser favorites for currently logged in users

shell:Sea


rches

Search folder of the currently logged in user, saves the search results already stored

shell:Links

Link folder of the currently logged in user , save the navigation panel of Internet Explorer browser

shell:Public

Access shared user folder

shell:Common Desktop

Share User Desktop

shell:Common Documents

Share User My Documents

shell:CommonDownloads

Share User Download Folder

shell:CommonMusic

Share User Music Folder

shell:CommonPictures

Share User Image Folder< Br>

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