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Forum Discussion
Malbone
7 years agoNew member | Level 2
Dragging file -- copy vs. move
I use Dropbox to move files between Mac computers (OS 10.11 and 10.13) and Windows computers (Win7). When I drag a file from the Dropbox folder to a Windows local folder, it COPIES the file. When I...
- 7 years ago
Malbone wrote:
Why the inconsistent treatment of the same action?
Whether a file is moved or copied when dragged is controlled by your operating system. Dropbox has nothing to do with it.
I can't speak to a Mac ( Mark can comment on that ), but on Windows, a drag and drop between locations on the same drive is considered a move, and a drag and drop between locations on different drives is considered a copy. There are modifier keys that you can hold on both operating systems to change what happens when dragging files. On Windows, holding CTRL will force a copy, holding SHIFT will force a move, and holding CTRL-SHIFT will create a shortcut.
Obviously there is a way in each system to reverse the default action, but why make the user remember to do that?
Ask Microsoft and Apple. It's entirely on them.
Lusil
Dropbox Staff
6 years agoHey _Bob21_, thanks for nudging us on this thread!
In general, when you drag and drop files into your Dropbox folder, even from a different drive, they'll move instead of copy.
You can find more info about why files move instead of copy in this article.
Nonetheless, thank you for taking the time to share your feedback with us!
If you have any other questions, just give us a shout. Thanks!
LAish
6 years agoNew member | Level 2
I don't normally post on these forums either, but this process is not cool. I think the business logic behind why this happens is that dropbox wants to be the authoritative source for you documents so you become increasingly dependent on dropbox and use it more and more- but this is an opaque and, I think, sneaky way to do it. For mac users, "dragging" files into a dropbox folder is just the same as "dragging" a file from one of your local folders to another local folder--except that now that file lives only on dropbox with every permission and potential problem that goes with that. I get why you are doing this Dropbox (in your article you state "we recommend moving all of your important files to your Dropbox." and I am sure you do!) but they way you're going about it not cool, and you know it, and it may be a reason to break up with you...
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