66

I started using computers with MS-DOS and as far as I can remember the data structure holding files was called a directory (it held other directories as well), DIR is still used to list the content of such structure. When I transitioned to Windows XP--I didn't go through the Win 95, 98, 2000 phase--the similar structure was called a folder and today you barely hear directory among regular users. So when the naming changed and why? Was directory a FAT16 structure or one or the other had attributes or other technical or low level differences?

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  • 18
    This most likely came from Mac. DOS had it from Xenix. Jan 17, 2023 at 5:59
  • 8
    As a side comment, the term 'directory' is widely used in the powershell community. Jan 17, 2023 at 11:29
  • 9
    As another side comment, the Amiga Workbench referred to directories as "Drawers", with an icon to match the name.
    – Edders
    Jan 17, 2023 at 12:25
  • 10
    MS merely changed the terminology from the almost universal (at the time) "Directory" to "Folder" as part of their transition to a "document-oriented" philosophy for their UI and application products. Jan 17, 2023 at 13:55
  • 7
    "folder" is half the syllables as "directory", so is more efficient :)
    – hegel5000
    Jan 17, 2023 at 16:08

10 Answers 10

70

Directory is a filesystem concept. Folder is a user-level concept.

From its beginning in the 1980s, the Macintosh GUI (and possibly other GUIs before it) only talked about "folders" and showed them on-screen as manila folders.

In the MS-DOS world, it was still about "directories". Windows, up to Windows 3.1 I believe, stuck with the MS-DOS concepts because people were still using DOS daily. File handling in Windows was done mostly through the File Manager, which navigated a hierarchical directory structure reflecting exactly what was on the disk.

Starting with Windows 95, the metaphor morphed into a more modern form and the word "folder" became the norm. The Windows Shell handled all File Explorer windows, plus the desktop, but was not limited to showing files in the way they were physically stored in a directory. There were abstract folder-like objects such as the Recycle Bin and the Fonts folder, and the desktop itself, and My Documents. Concepts such as Network Neighbourhood represent things that are hierarchical but aren't quite directories.

Windows user interface guidelines started to move away from the concept of the C: drive and all its directories, and encouraging applications to store files automatically under the Shell's My Documents folder unless the user chose otherwise. Office, of course, led the way to this approach.

This merged nicely with multiple-user concepts being introduced with Windows NT 3.5 and 4.0, with each user seeing their own My Documents folder in a convenient, predictable way, while physically it was stored in a user-specific directory somewhere under C:\WINNT\Profiles to help enforce access restrictions.

Today, the folder concept is stretched further with things like OneDrive or DropBox, which appear as folders in File Explorer and are based on physical disk directories but have some abstract extent into the Cloud, to the point where you may not know exactly if a given file you see on-screen is stored locally.

In summary, a directory is always a folder, but a folder can be many other things, and modern non-techie users see everything as a folder and have no concept of a directory.

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    On the original Macintosh File System, all files on a drive were stored in the same directory, but each file's directory entry had a byte associated with it to identify which folder (if any) it was in.
    – supercat
    Jan 17, 2023 at 19:02
  • 4
    Isn’t the file system a user-level concept? Jan 17, 2023 at 19:03
  • 6
    @user3840170 it's a lower level concept, often tied into the kernel - a filesystem refers to the structure of bytes on the drive used to store and index files and the software necessary to read, understand and interact with it. From a user perspective, the operating system is responsible for presenting a common interface of folders and files arranged in a tree. Think about an NTFS hard drive and a FAT32 USB drive - those are two different filesystems, but they appear to the user to be the same thing.
    – Blackhawk
    Jan 17, 2023 at 19:43
  • 3
    @user3840170 the next question you might ask is, "if everything is the same to the user, why not always use the same filesystem?" The answer is that each filesystem has different performance characteristics and limitations, and some provide additional features such as data redundancy, snapshotting, consistency guarantees, etc.
    – Blackhawk
    Jan 17, 2023 at 19:46
  • 3
    For me, directory is definitely a user concept without taking that as a claim that it cannot also be an operating system structure. When I started out on UNIX, I thought is a directory as a directory - more or less a file that contained information about and links to other files that might also be directories. I found this structure very easy to work with. There is no improvement on that regarding OS that use the word "folder" for this. Indeed, under the Windows WSL, they are often very closely mapped to each other - depending on whether you use CLI or GUI. Jan 19, 2023 at 5:48
42

TL;DR:

No, 'Directories' were never replaced by 'Folders'. They are the same.


The names just represent different views:

  • Directory is the data structure holding information about files (and other directories). It is what OS and all applications work with.

  • Folder is the mental image GUI systems invoke by using icons looking somewhat like folders. It's part of the desktop metaphor the Windows GUI uses.

The different viewpoint is already present with 16-bit Windows (3.1, etc.) running on DOS. When looking at a drive from DOS with DIR it shows directories. Looking at the same drive using the Windows file manager it will show neat folders.

A folder is to a directory as a document is to a file (*1) - simply an alternative name for users to handle data in a office-like fashion, not caring about terms those techno nerds came up with. :))

So when the naming changed and why.

It never did.

It may just be that you're nowadays more in contact with people who are non-techies - as well as reading documentation rather made for them, only using those metaphorical names of Folders and Documents instead of Directories and Files.


*1 - Well, one may restrict the term 'document' to 'data file', but that's kind of moot as in the original GUI definitions no files other than data files were user visible. The GUI metaphor of a desktop doesn't use programs, but various tools represented as icons (or properties). The user should not have to care about how a function is provided - or what a program is at all.

Likewise there were no drives, but drawers. Drawers were where files and folders could be put. The mundane idea of them being a specific user side visible drive with cryptic names only crept in when GUIs were add-ons - like windows.

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    I've always been accustomed to think of the pair as "folders and files" in modern times. A "directory" is an older synonym for folder, whereas a "document" is only a specific kind of file (not a synonym for computer files generally, as there are many files that would not be regarded as documents).
    – Steve
    Jan 17, 2023 at 11:39
  • 8
    Nit: they're not exactly the same. Some 'folders' are not 'directories' in Windows. There are cases of truly virtual folders manufactured by the desktop (Explorer or whatever), with no immediate counterpart in the file system. And trivially of course the term 'folder' is sometimes used for other non-file-system containers, e.g. a key in the Windows registry.
    – dave
    Jan 17, 2023 at 13:30
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    @another-dave that is because it's a metaphor, not an implementation. Then again, not every directory in a file system may be a directory of it's own, or real, as there are things like likes and virtual directories (think linux' devfs, or MS-DOS' \DEV 'directory' )
    – Raffzahn
    Jan 17, 2023 at 14:04
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    @TannerSwett's comment made me remember I had a hard time grasping the 'desktop metaphor' since I'd never actually owned a filing cabinet. (This was long after I was totally familiar with files, directories, volumes, etc.) Since I imagine that Young Persons Today don't use filing cabinets either, the whole 'folder' thing may be pointless. But then again we're dealing with systems where 'save' is represented by a picture of a floppy disk. Now get off my lawn!
    – dave
    Jan 17, 2023 at 18:14
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    I don't think this is a very useful answer... or at least it focuses so much on only half the answer that it harms its ability to do that for lack of proper context. The question appears to be at least 50% an "in the minds of users" question, and "folder" very much did replace "directory" in mainstream usage and mainstream user-oriented documentation.
    – ssokolow
    Jan 17, 2023 at 23:51
28
+150

1984 Mac: They did mean different things

The original file system of the Macintosh was called MFS (Macintosh File System). It was released with the first Macs in 1984. In this file system, "directories" and "folders" did actually have different meanings.

MFS is a "flat" file system. Each floppy disk ("volume") contains exactly one directory, a table that contains information about all of the files on the volume:

A volume contains descriptive information about itself, including its name and a file directory that lists information about files contained on the volume; it also contains files. The files are contained in allocation blocks, which are areas of volume space occupying multiples of 512 bytes.

Apple Computer, 1985. Inside Macintosh, volume II, p. II-79

Every file on the volume is listed in this one directory.

Each directory entry has a 16-bit signed integer field called fdFldr, the "folder number" of the file. The Finder created new folders by choosing another number. Files were placed into folders by setting their fdFldr. The number of folders was limited only by the size of the fdFldr field.

This system was horribly inefficient. To iterate through all of the files in a single folder, you had to iterate through every file on the volume, checking to see if its fdFldr matched your desired folder.

So they were different things in MFS.

1986 Mac: They now mean the same thing

By 1986, Apple developed an improved filesystem called HFS (Hierarchical File System). Directories were now nested. It was much more efficient; when you iterated a directory, you accessed just those files in that directory. Apple acknowledged that the folders in MFS had been merely an illusion:

The hierarchical directory structure is equivalent to the user's perceived desktop hierarchy, where folders contain files or additional folders. In the 64K ROM version of the File Manager, however, this desktop hierarchy was essentially an illusion maintained completely by the Finder (at considerable expense). The introduction of an actual hierarchical directory containing subdirectories greatly enhances the performance of the Finder by relieving it of this task.

Apple Computer, 1986. Inside Macintosh, volume IV, p. IV-90.

With HFS, Apple also acknowledged that folders and directories were now the same thing:

directory: A subdivision of a volume that can contain files as well as other directories; equivalent to a folder.

ibid, glossary p. IV-312

So now they were the same thing. (Well, technically folders could only be subdirectories, because root directories were volumes.)

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    Huh :)) Like that being dug out. Upvote for historical detail. Just two points A) while being a single directory (catalogue) file system the folder numbers are what creates a levels - something otherwise called directories. Directories do not have to be recursive structures to work. A similar way was used on some mainframe file systems that had their catalogue in single key ISAM structures. B) Maybe more relevant, your explanation makes it look as if they are a first by Apple, but Folders existed already before the Mac - Jobs saw them at PARC.
    – Raffzahn
    Jan 18, 2023 at 1:22
  • You could argue that the fdFldr number was really just MFS's way to implement directories. i.e. it is an implementation detail.
    – JeremyP
    Feb 3, 2023 at 9:18
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I believe this is a distinction without a difference. As described reasonable well in the Wikipedia article on "directory", folder is more of a way of describing the use of a directory for holding user files. But there is no fundamental difference - directory and folder are two names for the same thing.

In fact (though someone will likely prove me wrong with examples in specific operating systems), I don't think there has been any fundamental change at the operating system (e.g., the many versions of Microsoft Windows) level. Rather, the change is among regular users. FAT16, FAT32, NTFS, HPFS (OS/2), APFS (Apple File System) all seem to refer internally to directories and it is only at the user level that the folder designation is used. Of course, the folder icons used by modern operating systems, combined with many users never using the command line, increases the use of "folder" among regular users.

Go to the command line and it is mkdir, cd, pwd, etc. Not mkf or cf or pwf. The change to folder is external, not internal.

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    The terms mkf, cf, pwf would also have been confusing to people who were familiar with code functions such as openf, scanf, which refer to files.
    – Kaz
    Jan 17, 2023 at 15:51
  • 2
    And break scripts. But my point is that the underlying directory terminology never changed - folders are an addition but not a replacement. Jan 17, 2023 at 15:54
  • 1
    @Kaz The f in scanf refers to format, not file. It seems you are the one confused… Jan 21, 2023 at 13:58
  • @user3840170 It would appear so. There's my morning learning done, then.
    – Kaz
    Jan 22, 2023 at 12:11
15

Folder is a concept that probably1 originated with the MacOS operating system (note the capital M, it's the original Macintosh operating system, not the one that used to be called OS X).

The term "folder" is a user interface concept that means "container for documents". Folders are implemented in macOS as file system directories but they are not identical. To understand why this is, you have to understand how documents are implemented. Documents are usually implemented as files2. However a document can sometimes be a "bundle" which is a collection of files in a directory. The top level directory has a special attribute set that makes it look like a single entity to the graphical user interface. The most obvious examples are Macintosh applications. These look like single objects in the GUI but, from the command line, if you list them, you can see they are directories.

jeremyp@eleanor dev % ls -l /System/Applications/TextEdit.app        
total 0
drwxr-xr-x  8 root  wheel  256  2 Dec 11:37 Contents
jeremyp@eleanor dev % ls -l /System/Applications/TextEdit.app/Contents 
total 16
-rw-r--r--   1 root  wheel  9263  2 Dec 11:37 Info.plist
drwxr-xr-x   3 root  wheel    96  2 Dec 11:37 MacOS
-rw-r--r--   1 root  wheel     8  2 Dec 11:37 PkgInfo
drwxr-xr-x  59 root  wheel  1888  2 Dec 11:37 Resources
drwxr-xr-x   3 root  wheel    96  2 Dec 11:37 _CodeSignature
-rw-r--r--   1 root  wheel   457  2 Dec 11:37 version.plist

So, in summary, a folder is a directory3, but a directory is not always a folder.

The same may not apply on Windows which does not have the same concept of bundles AFAIK.


1It may be that Apple appropriated the terminology from e.g. Xerox

2The term "file" has always been a source of annoyance to me. In dead tree technology, a file is a folder or a binder containing documents, so, really a file should be analogous to a folder/directory. I guess the terminology comes from the punched card days where each card would be a record and a stack of them would be a file.

3Except when it's not. Some applications use the term folder to refer to things that are not implemented as directories e.g. the mail app lets you have folders associated with mailboxes. The Apple mail app implements these as a combination of sqlite files and a directory, but it doesn't have to.

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    On "files", I would guess a "file" was primarily conceived as containing organised data - so the basic unit of a file system, the file, is something that practically always has some further internal structure.
    – Steve
    Jan 17, 2023 at 11:35
  • 5
    After carefully explaining in the first paragraph that you're talking about the original MacOS, you immediately switch to talking about applications on the modern (Unix-based) macOS. Applications on the original MacOS were single files, with additional elements stored in their resource fork. I believe the Amiga Workbench used the "application as magic directory" technique, but the relationship of the whole thing to the "directory" vs "folder" distinction seems tenuous.
    – IMSoP
    Jan 17, 2023 at 21:07
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    You may want to incorporate footnote#1 direct into the text, as PARC had them before, which is were Jobs (probably) saw the concept first.
    – Raffzahn
    Jan 18, 2023 at 1:25
  • @IMSoP On the Amiga an "application" was just an executable file. The term "application" was not used though. Me and my friends called them "programs". I can't remember what the Amiga docs called them. AmigaOS did not have a native concept of resources either in the program file or external files. Some programs had only the binary executable file and some had a bunch of files and directories in custom formats. So I don't think "application as magic directory" is correct any way I interpret it. Feb 3, 2023 at 7:29
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    @hippietrail I mis-spoke; it was Acorn RiscOS that I was thinking of.
    – IMSoP
    Feb 3, 2023 at 9:26
12

In my point of view, this is more a GUI vs. command line differentiation. Within a *nix-shell, I still "mkdir" and not "mkfolder". But in most of the window managers (not all), the icon resembles a physical folder. Same with the transition from MS-DOS to Windows.

1
  • This. Some other answers (Raffzahn's also Nimloth's) sort of allude to this point, as do some other answers that provide additional useful information/perspective. But "directory" is a term still thoroughly, heavily used where "command line" usage remains very common, including Unix and CMD.exe where some very commonly used commands reference the concept of a "directory". (Perhaps the question asker presumed the terms changed over time because the asker used GUIs more over time.)
    – TOOGAM
    Jan 18, 2023 at 19:22
10

Since the question body seems particularly focused on Windows, I am going to answer the question of when the name change happened in Windows. This answer is pretty easy: the name change happened in Windows 95.

Back in Windows 3.x, containers for files were named ‘directories’, just like they were in DOS:

Screenshot of Windows 3.11 File Manager, with the ‘File’ menu pulled down, revealing a highlighted ‘Create Directory...’ item

Windows 95 introduced the name ‘folder’:

Screenshot of context menu displayed on top of Windows 95 desktop, with the ‘New’ submenu pulled out, revealing a highlighted ‘Folder’ item

The name change happened apparently pretty early in development: Toasty Tech’s gallery of screenshots shows that directories were named ‘folders’ already in Chicago build 58. This was before the introduction of FAT32 (which only appeared in Windows 95 OSR2), and even before long file name support was implemented.

Keep in mind, though, that in Windows, ‘folder’ is a name a bit broader than ‘directory’, in that it covers not only containers for files that usually correspond to records on storage media, but also ‘virtual folders’ like the Control Panel, Network Neighborhood or My Computer, which like directories are presented in the shell as having enumerable contents, but don’t have actual pathnames and act only as symbolic representations of more abstract resources. And at least at one point during development, the notion was going to be even more expansive than that. One mock-up found in the Microsoft Windows “Chicago” Reviewer’s Guide shows the Explorer being used to read mail inside an ‘Info Center’.

As for motivation for the new name, I can only speculate. Part of it was probably Macintosh envy; on the Mac, containers for files presented in the UI were called ‘folders’ (and, as @DrSheldon’s answer explains, initially did not correspond to directories in the disk format sense in the non-hierarchical file system used by the OS). Part might have been a desire to reflect the broadening of the abstraction to cover entities other than on-disk directories. But it also made sense on its own terms: another reason might have been a desire to reinvigorate the desktop metaphor. Notice for example, how Windows 3.x uses a folder icon for directories, and a filing cabinet icon for the file manager. Chicago simply changed the terminology to match: the new file manager was called the ‘Cabinet Explorer’ (though the ‘Cabinet’ part was later dropped), while directories were renamed to ‘folders’. And files, of course, are represented by icons showing sheets of paper. The renaming made the terminology coherent with the icons, and made it again a live metaphor for data organisation in an office.

7

Let's consider the classic definition of directory:

a book listing individuals or organizations alphabetically or thematically with details such as names, addresses, and phone numbers.

When computer scientists came up with the concept of a list of files stored in some organization, a directory immediately came to mind. All kinds of file systems had a directory listing for a list of files on a disk. Later, these directories could be nested using additional directory listings.

Now, we can look at the ordinary definition of folder:

a folding cover or holder, typically made of stiff paper or cardboard, for storing loose papers.

When computers first gained a GUI, there were analogies abound. The workspace was called a Desktop, deleted files would go in the Trash or Recycle Bin, and files were typically Documents. Since Documents could be analogous to printed media (also called documents), organizing those Documents would place them into Folders.

It's important to note that Folders are a GUI concept, and a Directory is a CLI concept. In most GUI systems, a Directory is often exposed as a Folder, but Folders can be other kinds of things as well. For example, Windows has various Magic Folders that can expose administrator tools and so on that are not actually stored in a real Directory. Similarly, most file systems can have Directories that are special, such as mount points and junctions/links.

Modern users, such as programmers, that are aware of the distinction, will often be specific about using the correct terminology. If they ask you to open a terminal, you'll almost certainly be working with directories, while if they ask you to open a File Explorer (or equivalent), they'll refer to the things they're working with as Folders.

As a metaphor, you can say that Directories are to Folders, as Files are to Documents. They mean essentially the same thing, but are slightly different in actual implementation and have slightly different meanings. In a CLI, you don't refer to a Directory as a Folder, and in a GUI, you don't refer to a Folder as a Directory.

Finally, as an example in programming, some languages use functions, and some languages use methods. They mean the same thing--a block of code to be translated to machine instructions--but the language you're using will reflect the terminology of the language itself to avoid confusion. In Java, you write methods, and in JavaScript, you write functions. Both accept parameters, have a return type, etc, but are simply called different things, as they were developed by different people.

3

The terms are essentially interchangeable metaphors for the same thing, but they are coming from different directions.

From one direction, you can start with a physical device (perhaps called a "drive", "disk", "volume", or "device") which stores a number of pieces of data (perhaps called "records" and "data sets", "inodes", or "files"). You want a way to reference them without knowing their physical location.

This leads to metaphors like a "directory", "catalog", or "index" - a list of names, pointing to their corresponding locations on the storage medium.

From the other direction, you have a number of logical objects (perhaps called "documents", or just "files"), and you want a way to organize them, independent of their physical location.

This leads to metaphors like "folder", "drawer", or "area" - a physical location or object which contains other objects.

The "container" metaphor is slightly more abstract: there might or might not be a "directory" or "catalog" underneath; notably, the original Apple Macintosh had "folders" which were actually stored as a label against each file, the whole disk having a single directory listing all files. When that was replaced by the Hierarchical File System, the user interface didn't need to change, because it was already using an abstract metaphor. This is a general trend: hiding details behind additional layers of abstraction.

The "container" metaphor also fits well with window and mouse based UIs: you can "open" a folder, drag a file "out of" it and drop it "into" another. The "directory" metaphor is more suited to text-based and automated processing: you can "examine" the directory, "add" and "remove" entries, perhaps even edit it as though it was a text file.

-1

The Folder is of a higher level of abstraction than the directory. The ideas of the functionality of a folder was thought up before the folder was a consept, so file systems have some of it, but this is about the consepts. The directory structure is tied to the hardware. a hard drive has a root directory and sub directories. and files stored in them. At least originally. A folder is tied to a user interfase. Not neccesarily to a piece of hardware. Why this is confusing is because the difference is rarly taken advantage of.

But a place where it is used is in your start menu in Windows. Your start menu will show the content of your users start menu AND the content of default users (or everyone) start menu. and as another example, your MyDocuments folder could have subfolder named MyLocallyStoredDocuments, MyNetworkStoredDocuments and MyCloudStoredDocuments. Only 1 of those folders would logically be stored in Your local dirfectory. but all 3 in the MyDocuments folder.

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    This is not true. The three directories you mention would all be within the MyDocuments directory. Calling it Network or Cloud doesn't mean that that is where it is located. If you put a symlink to a remote directory, it still isn't a directory within a directory, just a file.
    – Chenmunka
    Jan 19, 2023 at 14:57
  • 1
    Besides, wasn't the first thing anybody ever did with a new install of Windows to run Regedit and delete every single key that mentioned MyDocuments? But that is another story.
    – Chenmunka
    Jan 19, 2023 at 14:58
  • I always understood "folder" to be a GUI metaphor for a directory, rather than an abstraction. Jan 20, 2023 at 15:36
  • @Chenmunka: Not everyone. In fact I've never heard of doing that before. I've had PCs since the 486 days and was pretty nerdy and low-level. Feb 3, 2023 at 7:45

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