Win7 file name, directory name or volume label syntax is incorrect.

  

Win7 file name The directory name or volume label syntax is incorrect.

The steps are as follows:

The user creates a new folder in the mobile U disk, then unplugs the U disk, and wants to use this folder in the morning, it is found in the above figure. The problem —— location is not available, can not access this path, and prompts Wen Jiaming, directory name or volume label syntax is incorrect, the two folders in the new folder have become garbled!

If there are no important files, delete them? But whether it is delete or move or modify or view the properties, the display location is not available, and you cannot access —— the file name, directory name or volume label syntax is incorrect!

After using the 360 ​​file shredder, it will be automatically generated again, but the new folder on the top layer is replaced with a random number, and the garbled inside is still garbled, and it takes up a lot of space, more than 100 MB!

After analysis, the reason may be this: when creating a folder, the naming of the top folder or the internal two folders may not conform to the system specification, but can be named, but The system does not recognize, it may be a Windows bug, instead of seeing the garbled first thought of poisoning & mdash; — because after checking the signs of many viruses poisoning, there is no such prompt!

Since it is File name problem, then the solution is natural:

First, use the error correction function that comes with Windows.

Right click on the disk to which the folder belongs, then in the Properties tab of this disk (U disk), find the "Tools" tab, and then click "Check Error" in the folder. "Start check" button:

Click to pop up "Disk check option", "Automatically modify file system errors" and "Scan and try to recover bad sectors" front Check the checkboxes, and then click “Start”:

Second, transfer the files and folders outside the error folder to other disks, and then format the disk. Copy the files and folders copied to other disks, and you can!

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