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Grandperspective macos
Grandperspective macos










  1. GRANDPERSPECTIVE MACOS FOR MAC OS X
  2. GRANDPERSPECTIVE MACOS FOR MAC
  3. GRANDPERSPECTIVE MACOS MOVIE
  4. GRANDPERSPECTIVE MACOS SOFTWARE
  5. GRANDPERSPECTIVE MACOS ISO

GRANDPERSPECTIVE MACOS MOVIE

There are some movie files in iDVD projects I might consider relocating, and other stuff, but nothing that surprising. That's big, but it represents many years of pictures, and it is not growing unexpectedly. Roughly the entire lower right quadrant is my iPhoto library. But what's that set of _huge_ orange files in the upper right?īrowsing around is an interesting exercise: I can see that a good chunk of my system hard drive is being taken up by Garage Band content, the Applications folder, and other stuff that is bulky but that I probably don't want to delete. I might want to clean out some obsolete or unused files but again, it's not really what I'm looking for.

GRANDPERSPECTIVE MACOS SOFTWARE

dmg files for purchased software I've downloaded, and backup disk image files from Apple system software.

GRANDPERSPECTIVE MACOS ISO

What about the big red blocks in the upper middle? Those are mostly disk images - for example, Linux distribution ISO files. I use those sometimes, and that set of files isn't growing, so I'm not interested in removing them. So there on the lower left section, flush against the left edge of the window, that square of mostly regular-looking pale yellow blocks next to the rectangle of pale orange blocks? Those are Apple Loops - installed with Logic Pro. I'm more interested in finding unexpected disk usage. Just because a file or a group of files occupy a lot of space doesn't mean I want to get rid of them. With GrandPerspective you can just hover the mouse over the highlighted areas and see what files the colored areas represent. So it isn't near to full, but I have noticed the space used has been growing dramatically recently. Files in the same folder appear together, but their placement is otherwise arbitrary.On the right, the black area represents empty space on the volume. Each file is shown as a rectangle with an area proportional to the file’s size.

grandperspective macos

It uses a so called tree map for visualisation. It can help you to manage your disk, as you can easily spot which files and folders take up the most space.

GRANDPERSPECTIVE MACOS FOR MAC

GrandPerspective is a small utility application for Mac that graphically shows the disk usage within a file system. Disk Inventory X GrandPerspective (MacOS X) If you’ve ever wondered where all your disk space has gone, Disk Inventory X will help you to answer this question. It shows the sizes of files and folders in a special graphical way called “treemaps”.

GRANDPERSPECTIVE MACOS FOR MAC OS X

Desktop-agnostic no longer relies on KDE or any other specific desktop.ĭisk Inventory X is a disk usage utility for Mac OS X 10.3 (and later).Exclude rules for directories are easily configurable.File categories (MIME types) and their treemap color are now configurable.Properly show errors of cleanup actions (and their output, if desired).An unlimited number of user-defined cleanup actions.Multi-selection in both the tree and the treemap.QDirStat has a number of new features compared to KDirStat. QDirStat – Main window screenshot – notice the multi-selection in the tree and the treemap It runs on every X11-based desktop on Linux, BSD and other Unix-like systems. It does not need any KDE libs or infrastructure. This is a Qt-only port of the old Qt3/KDE3-based KDirStat, now based on the latest Qt 5. QDirStat is a graphical application to show where your disk space has gone and to help you to clean it up. QDirStat is by the author of the original KDirStat. The extension list serves as a legend and shows statistics about the file types.

grandperspective macos

The cushion shading additionally brings out the directory structure. The color of a rectangle indicates the type of the file, as shown in the extension list. So their area is proportional to the size of the subtrees. The rectangles are arranged in such a way, that directories again make up rectangles, which contain all their files and subdirectories.

grandperspective macos

The treemap represents each file as a colored rectangle, the area of which is proportional to the file’s size. The treemap shows the whole contents of the directory tree straight away. You may drill down to folders, sort, and locate the culprit taking up your hard drive space. It enables you to view a directory list, which resembles the tree view of the Windows Explorer but is sorted by file/subtree size. On startup, it reads the whole directory tree once and then presents it in three useful views:












Grandperspective macos