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Quick search for files on Windows

Quick search for files on Windows

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Jacebae
Member
51
04-13-2019, 09:42 PM
#1
Recently Linus talked about Windows file search and its speed in one of his videos. I've been using a 1 MB app named Everything for years to look through my files on Windows. It indexes over 3 million files on my laptop in under a minute, and once done, the search is almost instant. The index file is also quite small. How does Microsoft and Google manage this when a simple 1 MB app can do it perfectly?
J
Jacebae
04-13-2019, 09:42 PM #1

Recently Linus talked about Windows file search and its speed in one of his videos. I've been using a 1 MB app named Everything for years to look through my files on Windows. It indexes over 3 million files on my laptop in under a minute, and once done, the search is almost instant. The index file is also quite small. How does Microsoft and Google manage this when a simple 1 MB app can do it perfectly?

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TotoroGHG
Member
58
04-15-2019, 11:24 AM
#2
Certainly organized items are listed, such as downloads and documents folders. It seems the reason they don’t index the entire system is that a typical non-technical person would get overwhelmed with files they don’t understand. That’s just my assumption.
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TotoroGHG
04-15-2019, 11:24 AM #2

Certainly organized items are listed, such as downloads and documents folders. It seems the reason they don’t index the entire system is that a typical non-technical person would get overwhelmed with files they don’t understand. That’s just my assumption.

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Burgtomate
Member
50
04-15-2019, 12:30 PM
#3
Since everything is focusing solely on file names, Windows will explore files it recognizes (like txt, doc, xls, certain pdfs) and builds indexes for them. It handles a much larger amount of information to locate specific items. Still, Win10 searches often overlook more instances than Win7 did for me.
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Burgtomate
04-15-2019, 12:30 PM #3

Since everything is focusing solely on file names, Windows will explore files it recognizes (like txt, doc, xls, certain pdfs) and builds indexes for them. It handles a much larger amount of information to locate specific items. Still, Win10 searches often overlook more instances than Win7 did for me.

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IvyTheCat
Member
208
04-16-2019, 12:33 AM
#4
Windows can hide system files by default, and the search function looks through everything but takes a long time. By design, Windows doesn’t analyze file content unless you enable it, which makes the search algorithm very slow and the issue straightforward to resolve.
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IvyTheCat
04-16-2019, 12:33 AM #4

Windows can hide system files by default, and the search function looks through everything but takes a long time. By design, Windows doesn’t analyze file content unless you enable it, which makes the search algorithm very slow and the issue straightforward to resolve.

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Frostyduff
Member
237
04-16-2019, 02:05 AM
#5
This applies since it isn't indexed.
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Frostyduff
04-16-2019, 02:05 AM #5

This applies since it isn't indexed.

N
226
04-16-2019, 10:16 AM
#6
You also have these settings available in Windows 10.
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n_tiffanyblue_
04-16-2019, 10:16 AM #6

You also have these settings available in Windows 10.

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x_Tazie_x
Junior Member
11
04-16-2019, 12:01 PM
#7
Yes, the choice exists, though the execution quality is poor. It runs slowly, creates huge index files, consumes excessive CPU, but overall performance improves significantly.
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x_Tazie_x
04-16-2019, 12:01 PM #7

Yes, the choice exists, though the execution quality is poor. It runs slowly, creates huge index files, consumes excessive CPU, but overall performance improves significantly.

F
118
04-22-2019, 06:47 PM
#8
Yes, you can have the full content and the small index file searched together at once.
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FantasticMan08
04-22-2019, 06:47 PM #8

Yes, you can have the full content and the small index file searched together at once.