Generally underscore _ works best for this, and should be viable for both OSes.
Asklemmy
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy π
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
- Lemmyverse: community search
- sub.rehab: maps old subreddits to fediverse options, marks official as such
- [email protected]: a community for finding communities
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_[email protected]~
Personally, my brain manages to filter out anything with a leading underscore (I don't know the origin offhand, I think some system I worked with at some point used those on files that I knew I didn't care about). So when coworkers use leading underscores it slows me down a bit.
It does work though
Yes, underscores or leading digits (for ordering eg. 000_ 001_ 002_) works well.
You could always do:
1_Pics
2_New Folder
3_Music
4_Games
A folder 1
AA folder 2
AAA folder 3
Who cares about readability and logic. My outlook work archives are a mess.
I use ! to sort to top, and Ξ© to sort to bottom. So far haven't had any compatibility problems.
For the curious: the use case for this is when you want to reduce nesting but also want a sort of "soft hierarchy" within a folder. I could separate my music folder into albums and playlists, but then I'd have a mostly empty folder, so instead I put both in the same directory and use prefix naming to sort them.
This is an exact answer to the question and yet reading it makes my skin crawl. TIL I have opinions on file organization!
I don't usually "pin to top" or "pin to bottom" but I often have pseudo-folders that use a similar approach, for instance
- Healthcare
- Taxes 2020
- Taxes 2021
- (etc)
- Work 2020 (Name of job)
- Work 2021 (Name of job)
- (etc)
Just saying that in Nemo (or whatever the cinnamon file manager is called) you can pin a file/folder to the top through the right click menu, unless I'm remembering wrong. But I haven't used this feature at all so I don't know how well it works for any use case.
@
Because why go for the obvious
I use exclamations in Windows ("!!first" will be sorted above "!second" for example)
and "Iβm curious whatβs the need for the folder to be sorted first that something like folder pinning or tagging"
Not sure what "tagging" would be in a windows perspective, does it have that? and "pinning" could be using the Quick Access bar I guess which I do for folders I want access to GLOBALLY, but if I have many sub-folders, and in the context of THAT FOLDER I am interested in several more than the rest, but outside that folder I don't care less about them, I'll use exclamations so I can find them easier
(Example, I have a TTRPG folder of art assets for maps from dozens of different sources, each with own naming conventions, and two folders !!Sorted and !Working, as I slowly go though the list to find, name, sort, discard and otherwise clean up the list so I can find what I want. If it was called "Sorted" it would be in the middle of the folder structure and a pain to find when I need it, but I also NEVER NEED that sub-folder unless I am working on cleaning up/sorting that data)
I think the exclamation mark tends to be a good one.
no judgements but I'm curious what's the need for the folder to be sorted first that something like folder pinning or tagging doesn't work for you?
Can you do that from a terminal?
tracker-tag works
Generally speaking: If you want folders to be on top, do it in your application. You should not prefix folders with "random characters" to make them listed in a specific place.
If you really want to, you could use A Foldername
because A
is the lowest Unicode point character that is a letter (0x41
) You could also use @
(0x40
). I've seen @Foldername
in the wild a few times. I would not use numbers, because numbers are stupid, you also cannot easily change them if you want to have another folder between two already existing ones.
Some applications might ignore non-letter characters (what is interpreted as a letter, depends on your locale) on sorting, though. So the safest would be A
.
A dot.