nothing96 said:I manage to change the name now,
but how to change the shortname.
cheer.
nothing96 said:I manage to change the name now,
but how to change the shortname.
phillymjs said:Easy, and known to work in Jaguar and Panther:
1. Log in as an admin user other than the account you're messing with.
2. Change the shortname in Netinfo Manager. Every property whose value is the old shortname should be changed to the new shortname.
3. If the user is an admin, be sure to go into the admin group and change the value of the users property whose value is the old shortname.
4. Save your changes and quit Netinfo Manager.
5. Open up Terminal, and do a "sudo mv /Users/[oldshortname] /Users/[newshortname]" to change the name of the user's home directory.
6. Log out of the admin account and go in as the user you edited. Everything should be peachy keen.
I have used this method many, many times to change accounts on Jaguar builds on machines I've rolled out to clients. Never had any problem at all. I also tested this on my iBook running Panther, and it seems to work just fine.
~Philly
Calebj14 said:is it possible to have spaces or caps in your short name? i didn't think so, but i thot i'd ask, because my mom's an English teacher and it drives her nuts![]()
michaelrjohnson said:it's not that i dont' trust you, but has anybody (else) tried the step-by-step method stated above? i just dont' want to mess up any of my permissions, i still want to be able to access my files. thanks!
kingjr3 said:Isn't this why there is a "display" name and a short name. Usually you never need to use the short name for anything other than administrator permissions dialog boxes, and even in that case, i think either will work. You mom need not worry.
phillymjs said:So create a new dummy account on your Mac that you can screw up without fear, and try my method. That's what I did when I tested it in Panther on my iBook. When I was satisfied it still worked in Panther, bye bye dummy account.
~Philly