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Scratch Disk Full

Community Beginner ,
Feb 04, 2017 Feb 04, 2017

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I have a fairly new Macbook pro computer in which I downloaded Photoshop CS5 and Bridge.

I keep getting the pop up window telling me my Scratch disk is full.  I've read every tutorial and tried to follow the steps to fix this problem, but it still persists.  I've tried manually erasing temp files, I bought an external hard drive so I had another drive option under the scratch disk preferences, other than using the computers hard drive. I've "purged all" under the edit drop down menu, I've erased the cache in bridge, I put all my pics on iCloud to free up space, and I've emptied the trash.

I'm kinda desperate at this point.  Does anyone know what I can do to permanently fix this problem?

Thanks!

Screen Shot 2017-02-04 at 6.39.07 PM.png

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

LEGEND , Feb 05, 2017 Feb 05, 2017

Freeing up space is simple in principle; often difficult in practice.

1. Find the big files.

2. Check whether you need them.

3. Get rid of the ones you don't need.

Of course step 2 is the killer. You can find files with Spotlight. Don't assume it's full of Photoshop temporaries, it could be full of all sorts of things. Other apps? Upgrade to Sierra? Browser cache? iTunes library? Videos? The list is endless. Be sure to have a backup before removing anything.

You didn't answer how large your disk is.

...

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Community Expert ,
Feb 04, 2017 Feb 04, 2017

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Here are a few ideas: Photoshop - Fixing Scratch Disk is Full Errors

Look for and delete temp files as instructed.

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Community Beginner ,
Feb 05, 2017 Feb 05, 2017

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I've read this article and have tried what it recommends.  It recommends not using a removable drive for a scratch disk.  So I'm assuming it's not okay for me to use the ext hard drive I bought in place of the laptops internal drive?  If this is the case, what other options are there?

It also says to set the scratch disk to be the fastest drive in your system.  Not sure how to do that.

Technology and all it's terminology is super foreign to me.  I feel like I might be causing more damage to my computer with all the stuff I've tried from following every random tutorial I can get my fingers on. 

I've always done very basic stuff on my computer, and photoshop was me trying to move outside my comfort zone.  But since I can't get photoshop to even work on my computer, maybe that wasn't a good idea?  Is scratch disk a problem that an amateur like me could even figure out? It doesn't seem like an easy fix. Is there a group of photoshop techie's that I can hire to come to come to my house and save my technology challenged life? ugh!

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LEGEND ,
Feb 05, 2017 Feb 05, 2017

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what you've done to free up space hasn't made much impact. try taking the internal drive out of the list, a disk this full will cause constant issues With all sorts of thing probably can't even install a MacOS update.

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LEGEND ,
Feb 05, 2017 Feb 05, 2017

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An external drive is not ideal but your internal drive seems to be full. You're going to need to free a lot more space just for everyday use. How large is the drive? What did you fill it with?

Forget random tutorials. There isn't a magic bullet. Take ownership and look at what you actually have on the disk. every computer owner has to do this.

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Community Beginner ,
Feb 05, 2017 Feb 05, 2017

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Okay so how do I free up more space on the HD?  I've apparently filled the hard drive up with Photoshop temp files because photoshop is the only thing I do on this computer. If an external drive is not ideal, what other options are there?

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LEGEND ,
Feb 05, 2017 Feb 05, 2017

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SSL2007 wrote:

Okay so how do I free up more space on the HD? I've apparently filled the hard drive up with Photoshop temp files because photoshop is the only thing I do on this computer. If an external drive is not ideal, what other options are there?

There is a bug in the newer versions of PS. It makes these Temp files and doesn't delete them.

You can delete them manually without doing any harm.

PS Temp files.PNG

I do it every now and then. But I have tons of free disk space on the drive they are created on.

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Community Expert ,
Feb 05, 2017 Feb 05, 2017

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This is not exact by any means, but you can click on your desktop, go to the Apple menu, click on

About this Mac and then click on Storage, which will give you some idea of what is taking up major

space on your internal Macintosh HD.

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LEGEND ,
Feb 05, 2017 Feb 05, 2017

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How do I know it's full? It says so in the screen shot!

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LEGEND ,
Feb 05, 2017 Feb 05, 2017

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Freeing up space is simple in principle; often difficult in practice.

1. Find the big files.

2. Check whether you need them.

3. Get rid of the ones you don't need.

Of course step 2 is the killer. You can find files with Spotlight. Don't assume it's full of Photoshop temporaries, it could be full of all sorts of things. Other apps? Upgrade to Sierra? Browser cache? iTunes library? Videos? The list is endless. Be sure to have a backup before removing anything.

You didn't answer how large your disk is. I deduce you have "MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Early 2015)", which came with 128GB, 256GB, 512GB, or 1TB SSD disk. The smallest seems barely usable to me.

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New Here ,
Jul 20, 2020 Jul 20, 2020

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Hello, 

 

What do you mean "find the big files"? Do you mean files on my computer? Or photoshop files specifically? 

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LEGEND ,
Feb 05, 2017 Feb 05, 2017

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I believe there are no other options, by the way, for a MacBook Pro, except a rather risky (and warranty voiding) disk upgrade. And you WILL need to free up space, other things will soon be failing. A basic recommendation is around 20GB free space as a normal everyday thing.

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Community Expert ,
Feb 05, 2017 Feb 05, 2017

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I use a free maintenance tool, Onyx, and it does a nice job cleaning out old caches.  It should free up space, but soon you will need to decide what stays on your system drive.  Onyx:  Titanium Software - Home

On my mid 2012 MBP I'm fortunate to be able to install a higher capacity SSD and bump the ram to 16 GB.

Gene

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New Here ,
Jan 14, 2018 Jan 14, 2018

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I'm having the same problem, and it's a new mac bookpro, but I still can't free up space. What can I do? on disk utility it shows me that most of my memory is full, how do I delete it without deleting files I need?

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Community Expert ,
Jan 14, 2018 Jan 14, 2018

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Perhaps you have free space, but it isn't being claimed.

Reboot your Mac and hold down Cmd r to boot into recovery mode:

About macOS Recovery - Apple Support    Select Disk Utlity and run First Aid on your boot volume.

When done, exit disk utility and restart. Boot  normally.

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LEGEND ,
Jan 15, 2018 Jan 15, 2018

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You need to look into what us using the space. In detail. Look at the size of files. Look at hidden files. Your own files might be the problem, or too many apps, or leftover temporary files, or video caches, or maybe you just didn’t buy a big enough disk... but above all don’t Just delete at random. You’ll need to learn a lot about what’s in your Mac.

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