Newbie - Admin password to delete files?
Hi all 
Still learning to adapt to the Mac since yesterday. Question: When I want to delete a group ofiles, the system asks me for an admin password. If my wife logs in (as a standard user, I am the admin) and she wants to delete files the systems asks for an admin name and password. Is this normal? Should the admin password be neeeded just to delete files?
Thanks and cheers

Still learning to adapt to the Mac since yesterday. Question: When I want to delete a group ofiles, the system asks me for an admin password. If my wife logs in (as a standard user, I am the admin) and she wants to delete files the systems asks for an admin name and password. Is this normal? Should the admin password be neeeded just to delete files?
Thanks and cheers
Comments
For files that you have already moved the wrong way you should Finder->File->Get Info->Owership & Permissions->Details and change the owner to the proper user, and "Apply to enclosed items" for folders.
Once you get used to the security system things will start to make more sense. Apple just has a more robust system than is default on Windows.
Originally posted by tilt
Hi all
If my wife logs in (as a standard user, I am the admin) and she wants to delete files the systems asks for an admin name and password. Is this normal? Should the admin password be neeeded just to delete files? Thanks and cheers
If she is asked to authenticate, it means the files she is trying to delete don't belong to her. You can see what their permissions are by logging in as her and choosing "Get Info" on the files on a right-click, on a control-left-click, or by choosing Get Info from the File Menu. The resulting Get Info window will have a pane labeled "Ownership and Permissions".
Ask further and welcome to Macs.
Thanks for your responses. I guess the reason is that I moved all the files into both of our accounts by copying them from a CD that I had backed up from the Windows and Linux machines. Therefore since the files were not "created" by the user that was logged in I guess the system assumes they are not mine.
Karl, I have to read your response again to understand exactly what you are trying to say and then I shall know better
Cheers
Originally posted by tilt
Karl, I have to read your response again to understand exactly what you are trying to say and then I shall know better
Cheers
Heh - here's what you do: click once on a file to select it (if only the filename highlights, it thinks you want to rename- in that case, click on the icon).
Then either right-click if you have a >1 button mouse, or control-click if not.
Choose "Get Info".
When the Get Info panel opens,, look for permissions. Click the arrow to open it up. You will see what the BSD permissions for Owner, Group, and everyone are. You can change them by authenticating as Admin and changing them.
Originally posted by tilt
Karl and Lundy,
Thanks for your responses. I guess the reason is that I moved all the files into both of our accounts by copying them from a CD that I had backed up from the Windows and Linux machines. Therefore since the files were not "created" by the user that was logged in I guess the system assumes they are not mine.
Karl, I have to read your response again to understand exactly what you are trying to say and then I shall know better
Cheers
tilt, i have seen this happen.... when you copy files from a CD, also it sometimes makes all the files 'read only'.... anyway looks like Karl and Lundy have taken care of you...
I thought it could be the CD thing making files read-only, but that does not seem to be the case because I can delete some files whilst others ask for the password. It seems more prevalent when I delete a group of files or folders rather than single ones. I still have not been able to identify a pattern to this. When I do, I shall know more.
OT - Sunil, are you from Madras?
Karl and Lundy, the permissions are read-write, I checked. Let me try and find a pattern in this
Thanks again and cheers
Originally posted by tilt
Hi Sunil,
I thought it could be the CD thing making files read-only, but that does not seem to be the case because I can delete some files whilst others ask for the password. It seems more prevalent when I delete a group of files or folders rather than single ones. I still have not been able to identify a pattern to this. When I do, I shall know more.
OT - Sunil, are you from Madras?
Karl and Lundy, the permissions are read-write, I checked. Let me try and find a pattern in this
Thanks again and cheers
yeah cool good luck with it...
to explain
my dad is indian and my mum is chinese, hence the indian name... let's see, i grew up in malaysia as a kid, then spent time in singapore, brisbane, melbourne, sydney, san francisco, sydney, and now living at "home" again after all this while (kuala lumpur, malaysia)... i'm 26
never been to india or china, i'm quite an anglophile -- i blame the british, spent most my life in ex-colonies of the Empire... except for california which umm.... lets see... used to belong to mexico... and of course native americans before that....
Cheers
Originally posted by sunilraman
yeah cool good luck with it...
to explain
my dad is indian and my mum is chinese, hence the indian name... let's see, i grew up in malaysia as a kid, then spent time in singapore, brisbane, melbourne, sydney, san francisco, sydney, and now living at "home" again after all this while (kuala lumpur, malaysia)... i'm 26
never been to india or china, i'm quite an anglophile -- i blame the british, spent most my life in ex-colonies of the Empire... except for california which umm.... lets see... used to belong to mexico... and of course native americans before that....
This is quite a biography, isn`t it?
best and warmly
Originally posted by Vox Barbara
This is quite a biography, isn`t it?
best and warmly
thanks voxy... lets just say i am somewhat confused but learning to enjoy my uniqueness