The first paragraph says OS Windows provides a warning when the deletion is attempted from OS Explorer. Then you go on to say, MUSICBEE will delete that folder "without triggering Windows warnings." Does that mean without triggering the OS Windows warning pop-up, period, or, it won't show the OS pop-up but instead shows a version of its own?
Yes, it means without triggering the OS Windows warning pop-up. It won't show the OS pop-up, but instead shows a version of its own:
https://i.imgur.com/rQ1l6oe.pngLike I said, I don't expect MusicBee to use the Windows popup, but it would help. If that were so, if I agreed to the warning from MusicBee, I would also see a warning from Windows because the files are too big, and I wouldn't delete everything.
When a folder larger than the OS imposed limit is attempted to be deleted within MusicBee, does MusicBee show a warning message OF ANY KIND (it's own write, or the standard OS warning) first?
Yes, it shows MusicBee's writed own one warning, when you are deleting a folder:
https://i.imgur.com/rQ1l6oe.pngIt's a common warning, almost no different than a usual one warning when deleting a single track, even though you're deleting a 200 gigabytes folder.
The usual warning when you delete track, not folder, is here:
https://i.imgur.com/rwUTb83.png (it says permanently, but it's not true, because your small files will end up in Recycle Bin).
If the answer is "yes," the whole discussion is a non-issue as far as I'm concerned.
Disagree.
If you delete 8 tracks in a row, you might read it the first time but are you going to read it the next 7 times? Maybe you would, but many others would not because the intent is to do the same thing multiple times, it's just muscle memory. This doesn't make the confirmation useless, it avoids a delete when accidentally hitting the delete key by requiring a two button combination.
The only mistake that can happen is a misclick on a folder which is a small chance, but users are not aware that large sizes can be wiped clean from the drive so maybe they aren't clicking carefully either. I don't get the issue of an optional safe delete, whether that should be enabled or disabled by default I'll leave up to others to decide.
I'm afraid it's too complex a concept for them to grasp. I guess it's naive for me to assume that I'll be understood by people who don't delete a lot of files in MusicBee because they have a different style of listening to music and working with files.
Hell, I never realized that MusicBee could delete a 200 gigabyte folder like it was just another mp3 file without thinking it was too much weight, even though even Windows thinks so. Yes, I do think that if a file folder is too big, MusicBee should give me 2 warnings instead of one. As I've said before and shown in the images in the OP post, it's not hard to make a mistake. It's just one possible solution for user safety, and what the developers will do with it is up to them.
P.S. I am communicating with you through an translator. This may be the reason for the misunderstanding, although I doubt it's just me that's the only problem.