Hmmm... When a file is moved to a different location on the same volume
only the pointer to the file is modified. When a file is moved to a
different volume the file is copied to the target volume then the old
one on the source volume is deleted. On top of the copy and delete
operations, and to complete the file deletion process, you format the
target drive and add yet another operation to the task. How can that be
faster than just deleting the files on the source volume?
John
Ronaldo wrote:
> To delete the files all at once and fast; if you have an empty partition
> available, move the files to that partition and format it.
>
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> "5tulips" <(E-Mail Removed)> escribió en el mensaje
> news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>
>>Windows XP Pro SP2
>>
>>I have a need to delete a large group of files from my computer:
>>about 40 GB
>>They are in spans of 650,000 KB each.
>>
>>I thought I would not do them all at once, but a little at a time.
>>
>>I use Shift+Delete so they don't go in the recycle bin.
>>
>>How much can I delete at a time before each restart?
>>
>>
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