George,

I hope my post isn't seen as discouraging anyone from posting questions like 
this. I didn't mean to sound hectoring. I was suggesting only that Google is a 
very useful source of information. Call it an alternative to this list, except 
that I find the posts here much more specific and therefore informative. I know 
that you often solve other people's problems here.

I know you're asking about Win10, but I'd expect the command line to be the 
same in Win10. In case you've deleted those Win7 steps, although I haven't run 
the check disc command in a long time, I believe the line is as follows:
chkdsk /r

That's assuming you have only one drive, with no other discs in place. If there 
are other drives, after chkdsk, type a space, then / and the letter of the 
drive you want to fix. Leave a space before the /r. Thus, for drive C, it would 
be:
Chkdsk /c /r

If this is bad information, someone will be eager to correct me, which is good.
-----Original Message-----
From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of George Martinez
Sent: Monday, March 20, 2017 2:09 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [JAWS-Users] check disk

Hello,
I have not used check disk since Windows 7 but I am having some issues in my 
Windows 10 and want to run check disk.
I do not have internet right  now or would ask Mr. Google.  What is the exact 
command in Windows 10 at the run command line?
George

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