Hello, Minh Thắng Nguyễn
Welcome to Microsoft Community
Thank you for your feedback. I read your description of the problem. All the strange phenomena you encountered - the music folder became the D drive, the picture folder covered the music folder, the D drive had strange icons, and the pictures that had never been seen before - were all due to a core error. When moving the folder location, you directly selected the target location as D: instead of creating a new folder on the D drive (for example, D:Music) and then selecting the new folder.
The correct way to do this is to tell Windows: "Please move my 'Music' folder to a new room called 'Music' on the D drive." (Destination path: D:Music) What you actually did was tell Windows: "Please move my 'Music' folder to the D drive." (Destination path: D:). This caused Windows to confuse the concepts of "Music folder" and "D drive root directory". The system now thinks that the entire D drive itself is your Music folder.
I suggest you try to repair the registry manually, you can directly tell Windows the correct location of these folders. This requires editing the registry. Please follow the steps carefully.
Step 1: Press Win + R on the keyboard to open the "Run" dialog box. Type regedit and press Enter to open the Registry Editor. In the Registry Editor window, click "File (F)" -> "Export (E)" in the top menu. Choose a safe location (such as the desktop), give the file a name (such as Registry Backup), and then click "Save". This way, if something goes wrong, you can double-click the file to restore it.
Steps 2: In the Registry Editor, copy and paste the following path into the address bar at the top and press Enter: HKEY_CURRENT_USERSOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorerUser Shell Folders In the right window, you will see a long list. This is where your personal folders (Music, Pictures, Videos, etc.) are located. This is where your problem lies. You need to find the following values and double-click their data to change to the correct default values.
Name (Name) The incorrect value you may see The correct default value to change to
My Music D: %USERPROFILE%Music My Pictures D: %USERPROFILE%Pictures {374DE290-123F-4565-9164-39C4925E467B} D: %USERPROFILE%Downloads My Video D: %USERPROFILE%Videos
For example, find the file called My Pictures . You may see its data as D:. Double-click My Pictures. In the "Edit String" window that pops up, delete D: in the "Value data" box and enter %USERPROFILE%Pictures. Click "OK". Repeat this for all the folders you moved in the table above (Music, Pictures, Downloads, Videos, etc.), making sure they all point to the correct %USERPROFILE%... path.
Step 3: Close the Registry Editor. You must restart your computer for these changes to take full effect.
Best regards Ami - Microsoft Community Support Specialist