F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems No, Win10 doesn't currently combine gigabyte and gibibyte units. It uses standard byte measurements.

No, Win10 doesn't currently combine gigabyte and gibibyte units. It uses standard byte measurements.

No, Win10 doesn't currently combine gigabyte and gibibyte units. It uses standard byte measurements.

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Ipod984
Senior Member
707
08-31-2016, 09:39 PM
#1
It seems this could be an outdated topic, and I might have overlooked a conversation about it. I noticed that Windows Explorer displays varying GB figures compared to the properties page for the same file. For instance, a file might show 35.6GB in Explorer while its property page lists 33.9GB. This inconsistency is quite confusing and seems unusual.
I
Ipod984
08-31-2016, 09:39 PM #1

It seems this could be an outdated topic, and I might have overlooked a conversation about it. I noticed that Windows Explorer displays varying GB figures compared to the properties page for the same file. For instance, a file might show 35.6GB in Explorer while its property page lists 33.9GB. This inconsistency is quite confusing and seems unusual.

G
Gaspoda
Member
246
09-01-2016, 05:01 AM
#2
The value 35.6GB equals approximately 33.16GiB, indicating a possible mix-up between the units and an incorrect conversion.
G
Gaspoda
09-01-2016, 05:01 AM #2

The value 35.6GB equals approximately 33.16GiB, indicating a possible mix-up between the units and an incorrect conversion.

V
Valkeu
Member
120
09-14-2016, 03:48 AM
#3
The report includes both the file’s actual dimensions and its storage footprint. I believe the file manager displays the disk size. Because of how disks are structured, a file often needs more space than its physical measure. Would you like me to provide a screenshot of this file?
V
Valkeu
09-14-2016, 03:48 AM #3

The report includes both the file’s actual dimensions and its storage footprint. I believe the file manager displays the disk size. Because of how disks are structured, a file often needs more space than its physical measure. Would you like me to provide a screenshot of this file?

H
Hok_SL
Member
55
09-14-2016, 04:05 AM
#4
It's displaying a different result at least. I'm not really sure if it's gigabyte or gibibyte—just my initial assumption.
H
Hok_SL
09-14-2016, 04:05 AM #4

It's displaying a different result at least. I'm not really sure if it's gigabyte or gibibyte—just my initial assumption.

C
Char1ie_XD
Senior Member
578
09-15-2016, 05:02 AM
#5
Sure, I can clarify that. Would you like me to provide a visual example or describe what the comparison looks like?
C
Char1ie_XD
09-15-2016, 05:02 AM #5

Sure, I can clarify that. Would you like me to provide a visual example or describe what the comparison looks like?

A
aer1late
Member
71
09-15-2016, 01:40 PM
#6
Windows typically displays disk capacity in GiB, though GB is commonly used as an abbreviation. When you insert a 1TB drive, it might appear as 931GB, which equals 931GiB or 1TB. On the properties page, this could stem from compression settings or the disk's sector size.
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aer1late
09-15-2016, 01:40 PM #6

Windows typically displays disk capacity in GiB, though GB is commonly used as an abbreviation. When you insert a 1TB drive, it might appear as 931GB, which equals 931GiB or 1TB. On the properties page, this could stem from compression settings or the disk's sector size.

M
MLGSpeaks
Junior Member
9
09-16-2016, 09:38 PM
#7
Not quite. Here's example + screenshot. It shows 12,835,615kB in the explorer which converts to 12,8 Gigabyte if google is to be believed. However in properties it shows, well...something very different which is 13,143,669,496 Bytes or 12.2 GB which is again slightly different from file size on disk. I'm confused.
M
MLGSpeaks
09-16-2016, 09:38 PM #7

Not quite. Here's example + screenshot. It shows 12,835,615kB in the explorer which converts to 12,8 Gigabyte if google is to be believed. However in properties it shows, well...something very different which is 13,143,669,496 Bytes or 12.2 GB which is again slightly different from file size on disk. I'm confused.

C
coolman9222
Posting Freak
754
09-17-2016, 03:50 AM
#8
From what I recall, it was always this way, even with Windows 7. No updates.
C
coolman9222
09-17-2016, 03:50 AM #8

From what I recall, it was always this way, even with Windows 7. No updates.

T
Tocay
Junior Member
6
09-21-2016, 01:02 PM
#9
The GB value isn't displayed directly on the properties page; you need to check the specific details or settings where it appears.
T
Tocay
09-21-2016, 01:02 PM #9

The GB value isn't displayed directly on the properties page; you need to check the specific details or settings where it appears.

R
rafagp08
Junior Member
20
09-23-2016, 09:13 AM
#10
Windows displays values in kB while the actual capacity is in KiB. Google applies a standard conversion of 1000, which aligns with SI measurements, whereas Windows uses traditional PC units where the factor is 1024. This ensures the displayed figures match real-world storage sizes.
R
rafagp08
09-23-2016, 09:13 AM #10

Windows displays values in kB while the actual capacity is in KiB. Google applies a standard conversion of 1000, which aligns with SI measurements, whereas Windows uses traditional PC units where the factor is 1024. This ensures the displayed figures match real-world storage sizes.

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