how do u use cmd to transfer files from video folder to music folder
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By default, Windows stores your personal folders like Documents, Music, Pictures, and Videos in C:\Users. If you want to move them to a secondary drive—say, if you have an SSD that can’t house all your files—you can do so with a simple menu option.
These folders are stored in your user folder (so, if your user account name is Simon, you’d find them at C:\Users\Simon). You could move these folders by dragging them to the new location, but there are a few issues that can arise by doing so, like errors from certain programs. Using the “official” method we outline below ensures that you’re moving only folders that support being moved, and that Windows always knows where those folders are.
Before we get too far into it, here are the exact folders we’re talking about:
Contacts
Desktop
Documents
Downloads
Favorites
Links
Music
Pictures
Saved Games
Searches
Videos
There will be folders in your user directory that you can’t move this way. The AppData folder, for example, shouldn’t be moved. Some apps may also create folders there—especially cloud storage apps like OneDrive and Dropbox. You can’t move those using the instructions in this post. Instead, you’ll need to follow instructions for those given apps—we have a guide for moving the OneDrive folder and moving the Dropbox folder, for example.
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