what in Windows Explorer what are the five views of Window Explorer
Answers
Answer:
Regardless of how you access them, File Explorer provides eight ways to view the contents of a folder: Extra large icons, Large icons, Medium icons, Small icons, List, Details, Tiles, and Content. ... The different views to preview files and folders are Extra large icons, Large icons, Medium icons, Tiles, and Content.
Explanation:
File views
Windows 7 lets you choose any of five different ways of displaying files, known as file views. The five views are icons, list, details, tiles and content, each of which is useful in its own way.
Icons view displays a thumbnail preview of the contents of a file (or an icon if no preview is available). You can choose between small, medium, large and extra large icons or, if you use the slider control to change views, you can select intermediate sizes for the icons. The large icons view provides the most visual information, but it uses space inefficiently and is not very useful for folders containing many files.
List view provides the most efficient use of space for displaying large numbers of files. It displays a text label alongside a small icon that identifies a file’s type but, unlike icons view, not a preview of its contents. The filenames are displayed side by side in columns.
Details view lets you see some details about a file in addition to its filename. Filenames are displayed one per line, in tabular view, with columns to display the filename, file type, size and so on. By right-clicking any of the column headings you can choose from a list of additional columns to display, and clicking any column header lets you sort the file list by that column.
Tiles view is a cross between list view and details view. You’ll see a medium-sized icon—it provides a thumbnail preview of the file’s contents if available—plus the file name, its file type and the file size.Content view displays each file in a band by itself. It provides an icon or thumbnail preview, the filename, file size and other information that changes depending on the type of file being displayed. For music files, you’ll see the track’s genre; for image files you’ll see the dimensions; with Word documents the author is displayed, and so on.
A simple way to get more information about a file in any of the views is to display the Preview pane on the right side of the folder window (click the Show/Hide preview pane button on the right of the toolbar to display it) or to look at the Details pane at the bottom of the window. The Preview pane lets you see the contents of a file without opening it or, in the case of audio and video files, it lets you play the file without opening it. The Details pane lets you view and change many of a file’s properties and tags. If the Details pane isn’t visible, click Organize -> Layout -> Details Pane to display it. Note that you can resize either of these panes by clicking and dragging the divider between the pane and the file list.
Answer:
Windows Explorer, is a file manager application that is included with releases of the Microsoft Windows operating system from Windows 95 onwards. It is also the component of the operating system that presents many user interface items on the screen such as the taskbar and desktop.
Eight different views are available to view files and folders, including extra large, large, medium, small, list, details, tiles, and content. In addition, column headers now appear in all icon viewing modes, unlike Windows XP where they only appear in the details icon viewing mode.
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