· 1. Click on "Start" In the search box, type folder options, and press Enter. 2. In the Folder Options window, click on the "View" tab. 3. Check the option "Show hidden files, folders or drives" and uncheck the "Hide protected operating system files". 4. . · However now, when I choose Gallery the Downloads folder doesn't show in the list. The Downloads folder is still there and I can still access it via file managers. The only thing that's happened in that folder recently which may or may not have affected it, was downloading a zip file to that folder and unzipping it there, creating subfolders. · Step 1: Use the pre-installed Downloads app. This is the method that should work for most Android devices out there. Chances are, that if you look inside your app drawer, you will find an app called “Downloads”. Opening the app will take you straight to your downloads folder without the need to search anywhere else for the downloaded files.
4. Open the Downloads folder. 5. Locate and open the downloaded file. Using Chrome to Find Downloaded Files. Of all the browsers available to Android users, Chrome is the most widely used. If you use Chrome on your Android, recovering downloaded files and images is easily done even if you've erased it from your device accidentally. Manufacturers normally install a stock file manager app. Tap on this app and find the "Downloads" folder. This should be easy to do, as file manager apps tend to display folders alphabetically. Once you've located the Downloads folder, tap on it to access the files within. You will need an associated app to open or access the file you. The folder layout will go back to looking like it did before you updated to This 'Group by' option isn't new in Windows 10 It has been a part of Windows for ages. The only bug here is that Windows 10 decided to enable it for the Downloads folder on its own. Before that, the files in the folder had no sorting and it is possible.
Finding the downloaded files on your Android device is usually an easy task. The steps to finding them vary slightly, depending on what kind of device you have, but for some reason, the downloaded files tend to “disappear” sometimes. The files haven’t disappeared, though. You just have to dig in to your Android device’s settings to find them. Ugh! I didn't expect "root apps" would be affected by that "scoped storage" enforcements. But I wouldn't expect devs of such apps updating the targetSDK unaware of that, either. I have no Android device, but maybe you can check via adb shell with su if root is really (fully) affected? –. Step 1: Use the pre-installed Downloads app. This is the method that should work for most Android devices out there. Chances are, that if you look inside your app drawer, you will find an app called “Downloads”. Opening the app will take you straight to your downloads folder without the need to search anywhere else for the downloaded files.
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