Download Article Download Article

Tired of browsing through long paths? There is a way you can map a drive letter to a long path. This will save a lot of time with frequently accessed folders. For example, you can map a long path like D:\Documents\John\Letters to the drive letter X.

Method 1
Method 1 of 2:

Thru Command Prompt

Download Article
  1. On Windows Vista or Windows 7, open the command prompt as default user, not as Administrator. The reason will be explained later.
  2. For example: SUBST X: "D:\Documents\John\Letters".
    Advertisement
  3. You should see a newly created drive letter X:, with which you can access your mapped folder directly.
  4. /D
  5. To automatically map your folder when your system starts, put the SUBST command in a batch file, and put the batch file in your Autostart folder in the start menu. Advanced users can use the windows task scheduler, however this is not covered here.
  6. These mappings are only created for the user who originally issued the SUBST command. When you login as "John", and you open a command prompt as "Administrator" and execute the SUBST command, "John" will not be able to see any mapped drive letters because the mapping was created for "Administrator". This is why you need to open the command prompt as a default user in Windows Vista and Windows 7. When using the task scheduler, again make sure that the command is executed under the default user account.
  7. Advertisement
Method 2
Method 2 of 2:

Thru the My Computer button (Graphical Method on Windows)

Download Article
  1. You will be able to rename this mapped drive to anything you want.
  2. Type the server and share name of the computer or folder you want or Click Browse to find the computer or folder, in the Folder box.
  3. Advertisement


Community Q&A

Search
Add New Question
  • Question
    In Win 10 I have used the SUBST method to successfully map a local folder to a drive letter. However, whenever I delete a file from the "drive" it bypasses the recycle bin and gets deleted permanently.
    Community Answer
    Just drag them into the recycle bin. Or go to C: > Users > Username. Right-click on any folder of this location and click Properties > Location tab. Click on Move and browse the root drive (Which is mapped from before) and then hit Select Folder. Then click OK and when the dialog box appears hit Yes. Just repeat these steps for every user on the PC.
Ask a Question
      Advertisement

      Tips

      Submit a Tip
      All tip submissions are carefully reviewed before being published
      Thanks for submitting a tip for review!

      About This Article

      Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 163,984 times.

      Is this article up to date?

      Advertisement