Hello,
I have a small SSD on which I have only my OS (C:). Everything else gets saved on a larger HDD (E:). When I create a Twine story, it automatically saves on my C: drive -- I don't want that. How do make it save on (E:) automatically? My registry is set to direct my libraries to E: already, and this is the first program I've installed that goes back to saving on C:
Any help would be appreciated!
Thanks!
Comments
In version 2.0.8 of Twine on Windows you could influence where the application saved the story project files by creating a HOME environment variable, this no longer works with version 2.0.10 of Twine.
Not being able to control where story project files are saved is a major limitation of Twine 2.
One possible external solution in WIndows 7,8,8.1 & 10 is to use the mklink command to create a Symbolic link to replace the Stories folder with a reference to the folder you wish to use instead.
notes:
a. the following is assuming you are using Twine 2.0.10, previous versions of Twine may of stored the story project file in a different location.
b. the xxxx part of the following file path represents your windows user name.
1. Determine the current path to you Stories, it should be something like the following: 2. Open an Administrator Command Prompt, on Windows 10 this is done via right mouse button clicking on the blue window in the lower left of your desktop and selecting the Command Prompt (Admin) option.
3. Navigate to the Documents\Twine folder via the following command: 4. Rename the existing Stories folder using the following command, do this so you don't lose the existing story project files in that folder: 5. Create the Symbolic link to the folder you want as the replacement Stories folder using a command link the following, obviously you need to replace the last parameter with the actual folder name on your E: drive:
When you next open Twine 2.0.10 it should find whatever story file projects are in the folder on your E: drive.
1. I closed Twine.
2. I renamed the folder to
3. Then I moved Twine.OLD to Dropbox and renamed it to Twine. The ultimate location of my saved stories was:
4. Finally, open up Terminal (or your terminal emulator of choice), and add the symlink:
5. Run Twine and see if it worked! Seems to have for me.