Gene Heskett wrote:
Finder, if thats what you are using, I am not familiar with it, is probably showing you that which it has cached, before that folder was created.
The Finder is usually pretty good at noticing things like that. I just tried creating a directory using a shell command while the Finder was displaying the containing folder, and it appeared immediately. MacOSX has a "hidden" attribute that stops things showing up in the Finder. You can check for that using: ls -ldO /Users/TamaraB/Desktop/mymodules ls -ldO /Users/TamaraB/Desktop/mymodules/mymodules (note that's a capital letter O in the options). If the hidden flag is set on either of those, it will show up as "hidden" in the ls listing. Here's an example from my system: % ls -ldO newfolder2 drwxr-xr-x@ 2 greg staff hidden 68 9 Jun 19:32 newfolder2 ^^^^^^ As for *how* you ended up with an extra folder (and how it came to be hidden, if it really is) there's no way to be sure. One way you can end up with extra folders is by unpacking zip files. MacOSX's unzipping utility will create a folder for the unzipped contents if the zip file contains more than just a single folder at the top level. So if you created a folder called "mymodules" and then unzipped a file called "mymodules.zip" into it, you would get what you have here (except that nothing would be hidden). -- Greg -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list