Recycle Bin 3.99Gb limit

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Does anyone know how to increase the 3.99Gb limit on the Recycle Bin? I have
a 120Gb drive but if I cannot get the Recycle bin to hold more than 3.99Gb.
 
maltesebudgie said:
Does anyone know how to increase the 3.99Gb limit on the Recycle Bin? I
have
a 120Gb drive but if I cannot get the Recycle bin to hold more than
3.99Gb.

If you're using FAT32 you can't. As 4GB is the maximum file size.

--
Paul Smith,
Yeovil, UK.
http://windows.dasmirnov.net/ Windows XP Resource Site.

*Replace nospam with smirnov to reply by e-mail*
 
On 27.10.2004 11:19, maltesebudgie wrote:

--- Original Message ---
Does anyone know how to increase the 3.99Gb limit on the Recycle Bin? I have
a 120Gb drive but if I cannot get the Recycle bin to hold more than 3.99Gb.

Right-Click on "Recycle Bin", select "Properties", move slider accordingly.
 
Hi

Right click the Recycle Bin icon on the Desktop and select Properties. The
default setting is 10%, so you should be able to delete more than 3.99 GBs
with a 120 GB drive.
 
Are you sure it doesn't. It stores it as a percentage but if it uses a 32 bit number to display the max size then 4.99GiByte is the max it can show. If it uses a 32 bit number top calculate the size it uses then nothing you can do. Try deleting 5 gb of files and see if it exceeds 3.99 GB.

3.99GiBytes is the maximun for an unsigned 32 bit integer (2 gig if a signed int, meaning it can be a negative number, as hard drives show on 95).
 
In
maltesebudgie said:
Does anyone know how to increase the 3.99Gb limit on the Recycle Bin?
I have a 120Gb drive but if I cannot get the Recycle bin to hold more
than 3.99Gb.

I can't make sense out of this? Are you wanting to use the Recycle Bin for
a storage area?
 
Will said:
Right click the Recycle Bin icon on the Desktop and select Properties. The
default setting is 10%, so you should be able to delete more than 3.99 GBs
with a 120 GB drive.

No - it won't allow more than 3.99 to be set, even on an NTFS drive.
 
David said:
Are you sure it doesn't. It stores it as a percentage but if it uses a 32 bit number to display the max size then 4.99GiByte is the max it can show. If it uses a 32 bit number top calculate the size it uses then nothing you can do. Try deleting 5 gb of files and see if it exceeds 3.99 GB.

It will not allow any larger setting (even on NTFS). But it does seem
to me that this is way more than enough unless someone wants to delete
several movies without thinking
 
Have you confirmed that it won't hold more than 3.99 Gig. It could be a display problem I was going to try but couldn't find enough files that were big enough.
 
David said:
Have you confirmed that it won't hold more than 3.99 Gig. It could be a display problem I was going to try but couldn't find enough files that were big enough.

Yes - what is worse, if you try (I set up to 33% of a 50GB NTFS drive)
and select and delete more than the 3GB worth, files just get totally
deleted without appearing in the Bin, or any comment made. Luckily I
was in a position of having some 2GB image backup files that I intended
to tidy up in any case
 
Why I want it to hold more than 3.99 is not relevent. Why have a slider to
choose what percentage of the hard drive to use for the recycle bin if there
is limit of 3.99Gb? With drives getting larger and larger there may be valid
reasons for wanting the recycle bin to hold more than 3.99GB. I suspect
Microsoft have overlooked this and left the limit at 3.99. I would be
interested if anyone knows how to increase this limit.
 
It's unlikely to be changable. That's a magical programming value. The maximun number that can be held in a 32 bit word. If so it needs the code to be rewritten.
 

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