adriano wrote:Hello FMiguelez,
This seems to be the long way solution, but it's a way of doing it:
Open the folder-> Command-A to select all the files and then Opt-Command-I. When the inspector window opens, check the "lock box" and all files in that folder will be locked at once.
Adriano!!!!!
I tried your ⌥-⌘-I method, and it works. Well, almost, but MUCH better than doing every single file individually.
What I noticed is that it will work (after ⌘A) for every single file or folder that is at the
same level. But if I have nested folders within folders deeper in the structure, it will not change the lock status of the files in those deeper folders, unless I open each folder and repeat the procedure there. Is this normal?
But you just saved me so much time! I could do this in batches of 15-20 files at a time (one batch per folder level), and it works like a charm.
Took me 5 minutes to go through them all.
Thanks, Adriano. You are so helpful, as usual
Monkey Man wrote:Yup. You need to get into the floatin' Get Info window,
'Nando... ...Prepare to be amazed that you hadn't discovered it yet. It was a happy accident for the Monkster, I'm told.
I AM amazed
I mean, I knew about the ⌘-I thing, but not about the ⌥-⌘-I.
And I was happy to discover it gives you global info of only the selected files at once, so this is an unexpected and unrelated 2nd tip I got.
Thanks, guys!