Duplicates Cleanup Question

Started by Wow, January 01, 2022, 03:29:01 AM

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Wow

Previous to Imatch I've never found a photo org tool I liked and as a result am one of those people that have thousands of duplicate photos spread all over the place. I would like to use Imatch to clean them up. It has automatically identified them under the Duplicates category. However even after reading the help section I am a little lost. What I need to see at a glance is what (Windows) folders the duplicates are in. That way I could quickly determine which ones I want to delete. How would I do this?

Also, I assume that just deleting every file under duplicates would be a disaster? Insofar as I assume it is putting all duplicates there, so I would be deleting both the "original" and the "duplicate/s". Is that correct?

Lastly, I am sure that in many instances I have duplicates in the same (Windows) folder. In that instance I don't need to do any comparing, and would just like to quickly delete all duplicate files within the same Windows folder. Is that possible as a batch command? I see that if have a folder selected and use the filter panel I can select "duplicates" and it will instantly mark all the duplicates with a red line. Related to the question above, can I just delete every photo with a red line? Or would that be deleting both the original and copie/s?

Also, how would I sort them to the duplicates are next to each other?

Lots of interrelated questions here, I suspect that once I grasp the overall concept of how Imatch handles this it will all suddenly make sense.

Thanks


thrinn

Quote from: Wow on January 01, 2022, 03:29:01 AM
What I need to see at a glance is what (Windows) folders the duplicates are in. That way I could quickly determine which ones I want to delete. How would I do this?
An easy way is to use a File Window Layout showing the folder. The Simple Layout Editor offers "Path" as one of its standard items which shows the complete Windows path of the file.

Quote from: Wow on January 01, 2022, 03:29:01 AM
Also, I assume that just deleting every file under duplicates would be a disaster? Insofar as I assume it is putting all duplicates there, so I would be deleting both the "original" and the "duplicate/s". Is that correct?
Yes, that is correct. But you can use another functionality instead which is described here: Search > Duplicates opens a Result Window with the duplicates found (instead of assigning them to a category). If you use Ctrl-A in this result window, only duplicates are selected, not the "original". What IMatch assumes to be the "orginal" depends on the scope you started this command on: Let's assume you have a main picture folder like C:\MyPictures with files A.jpg and B.jpg, and these files have duplicates in C:\TEMP\IMPORT. If you select A and B in your main folder and run Search > Duplicates, IMatch will use these as originals and interpred the copies in C:\TEMP\IMPORT as duplicates.


Thorsten
Win 10 / 64, IMatch 2018, IMA

thrinn

Quote from: Wow on January 01, 2022, 03:29:01 AM
Lastly, I am sure that in many instances I have duplicates in the same (Windows) folder. In that instance I don't need to do any comparing, and would just like to quickly delete all duplicate files within the same Windows folder. Is that possible as a batch command? I see that if have a folder selected and use the filter panel I can select "duplicates" and it will instantly mark all the duplicates with a red line. Related to the question above, can I just delete every photo with a red line? Or would that be deleting both the original and copie/s?
I think this use case is exactly what is described here as A Special Case: Originals Which are also Matches.

And for your last question,
QuoteAlso, how would I sort them to the duplicates are next to each other?
the answer can be found here.

And, by the way, a Happy New Year!
Thorsten
Win 10 / 64, IMatch 2018, IMA

Mario

QuoteInsofar as I assume it is putting all duplicates there, so I would be deleting both the "original" and the "duplicate/s". Is that correct?
Not necessarily. If you did a normal index process during which IMatch found two identical files A and B, only one of the files (the file indexed later) will be marked as a duplicate. Say, B.
If you now later force rescan folders, to bring in files as "fresh" files, and A is rescanned that way, IMatch will detect that there is already an identical file (B) and mark A as well.

QuoteWhat I need to see at a glance is what (Windows) folders the duplicates are in. That way I could quickly determine which ones I want to delete. How would I do this?

As thrinn said, you can change the file Window layout to display the full folder name. Also, selecting a file and clicking Ctrl+G opens the corresponding folder in your database. Then you can check it, delete or whatever you want do do with it.

Wow

Thank you thrinn and Mario! Time to clean up some photos!