In a message dated 8/15/2001 6:35:04 PM Mountain Daylight Time, SueDotLund@aol.com writes: > 1. When opening the "import GEDCOM" screen, I would like the file tree to > "remember" the folder to which I last had it opened. I have an elaborate > file system and usually have to trace through the same six or eight folders > just to get to where I store the GEDCOMS. This is a pain when I'm trying > to > import 4 or 5 of them into my new database for playing privileges. It > would > be nice if it remembered the location after I find it the first time. > Version 10 allows you to enter default folders for the various file types (including GEDCOM files). > > 3. This is a housekeeping plea: Maybe I'm missing something that's > already > available, so let me know if I'm smoking my socks, or something... > Referring > to new databases generating those 34 little files that start with the name > of > the database, as well as all the LST files for all the GEDCOMS that get > opened -- When I'm done with my newly created databases, I have to delete > all these other little files along with my database when I'm trashing it. > I > would like for a database to create a folder for itself to hold all these > little files so I can just click on the folder to delete all that stuff, or > alternately, when I click on the database to delete it, could it "know" to > automatically clean up all the related files that go with it? This may > sound > like a silly request but I often have 5 or 6 new databases including 30 or > more new GEDCOMS that I work with in an evening. This creates a big pile > of > stuff that I need to weed through for deleting and hope I get it all > without > deleting the wrong things, too. Kinda scary when I'm already bleary-eyed > from staring at a computer all day. > Do "File, Delete" from the main menu to delete the database, and it automatically deletes all of the files that make up the database. - Bruce http://formalsoft.com - Family Origins genealogy software http://family-reunion.com - Plan the perfect family reunion