How Non-Recursive Folder Settings Affect Inheritance
Non-recursive Folder Settings control both where a Folder Setting applies and how inheritance behaves within a folder hierarchy. Their effect is limited to the same exact Folder Setting and does not influence other, unrelated Folder Settings that may be defined on subfolders.
The inheritance behavior depends on whether the Folder Setting is replace-style or combine-style. Folder structures that rely on predictable scoping and clearly defined boundaries depend on this distinction.
Scope of Non-Recursive Folder Settings
When a Folder Setting is defined as non-recursive, it applies only to the folder where it is defined. The setting does not apply to any subfolders.
This scoping rule applies only to that specific Folder Setting. Other Folder Settings defined on subfolders continue to apply independently and are not affected by the non-recursive configuration.
Inheritance Boundaries for Replace-Style Folder Settings
For Folder Settings whose nested effect is Replace, a non-recursive definition also acts as an inheritance boundary.
When a replace-style Folder Setting is defined as non-recursive:
- The setting applies only at the folder where it is defined
- The same Folder Setting defined at a higher level does not propagate beyond that point
- Subfolders do not fall back to a higher-level definition of that setting
Once inheritance is terminated in this way, it does not resume further down the folder hierarchy. Replace-style Folder Settings remain locally scoped, and a more general definition does not reappear at deeper levels.
Interaction with Combine-Style Folder Settings
Folder Settings whose nested effect is Combine do not act as inheritance boundaries in the same way.
Because combine-style Folder Settings are designed to apply cumulatively, non-recursive definitions limit where the local setting applies but do not block higher-level definitions of the same setting from continuing to apply in subfolders.
As a result, combine-style Folder Settings may still be in effect at multiple levels simultaneously, even when a non-recursive definition is present at an intermediate folder.
Explicitly Disabling an Inherited Folder Setting
In addition to recursion and nesting behavior, Folder Settings support an explicit option to disable an inherited Folder Setting without introducing a new configuration.
When this option is enabled at a folder:
- The inherited Folder Setting of the same type is disabled at that folder
- No replacement Folder Setting is applied at that level
This is useful when a folder should explicitly opt out of a higher-level Folder Setting while leaving subfolders free to define their own configuration.
See Also
Recursion: Where Settings Apply defines whether a Folder Setting applies only to a specific folder or also propagates to subfolders.
Nested Folder Settings defines how multiple definitions of the same Folder Setting interact when their scopes overlap.
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