Size in Giga, Mega, Kilo and Bytes folders and files?
The sizes in giga, mega, kilo bytes are quite practical for editing in the famose MS Office Excel on Windows 11, 10, ... and MS Server OS!
The byte specification can also be easily reformatted in MS Office Excel and used for various things, but must be optionally activated as a column in the file filter!
(Image-1) Size in Giga, Mega, Kilo and Bytes folders and files!
Info:
The size specification in Giga, Mega, Kilo and Bytes for directories, folders, files, documents, pictures is very popular and especially for the evaluation in MS Office Excel tables or in Open Office Calc . You can then very easily evaluate the corresponding folders according to file size and calculate diagrams or other things!
2.) What advantages do I have by specifying the folder and file sizes with adjustable sizes!
Adjusting folder size and file size in gigabytes (GB), megabytes (MB), kilobytes (KB), and bytes offers several benefits:
1. Better readability:
Representing folder and file sizes in different units makes them easier to read and understand, especially when it comes to large amounts of data.
2. Efficient Disk Space Management:
By using different units, users can easily see how much disk space a particular file or folder is taking up on their system. This makes it easier to decide which files need to be deleted or moved to free up space.
3. Faster Comparisons:
Adjusting the sizing allows users to quickly compare different folders or files to find out which ones take up the most space or which ones take up the least space.
4. Better Organization:
The ability to sort and group folders and files by size allows users to better organize and optimize their file systems.
5. Easier identification of space hogs:
By highlighting particularly large files or folders in GB or MB, users can more easily identify which items are taking up the most space and, if necessary, take action to optimize that space.
6. Flexible Customization:
Customizability allows users to adjust the presentation of folder and file sizes to their individual preferences and configure them as needed.
Overall, adjusting folder and file sizes in different units makes it easier to manage storage space, organize and analyze data on a computer system, resulting in more efficient use of storage space.
I find it practical it lists all folders, while in the navigation area you can select the folders of the currently selected main folder of the selected hard drive, just look for the option to become a path column, or other information is displayed, folder name, total size, total number, date the last change, ... I missed something there?
Does the CSV file export the number of folders and files of the folder in the folder size explorer?
I always calculated the storage space for all folders manually, but whenever changes were made by copying or moving in Windows Explorer, I had to document everything again in my Excel table. Is there an Excel export in the application?
Why show the folder size in bytes, kilobytes, megabytes and gigabytes for Windows?
I always wanted to show folder size in bytes, kilobytes, megabytes and gigabytes on Windows, the printout works great?
I think that the program is user-friendly because it searches everything immediately when it starts and it also automatically shows drives and folders, so their total size, wonder if things can be updated here with a button?
On Windows, I've always wanted to show folder sizes, although I can get this information if I open the folder's property sheet in Windows Explorer, but it takes a lot of time to analyze which directory takes up the most space, can you see files here?
Can you omit the decimal places for the file size, e.g. 101.774 KB and NOT as shown in the program 101.774.3 KB? (it would be cumbersome to change the values in the cells every time, for example in Excel)?
It is not to compare the folder sizes, who needs third party tools, is the folder size in Windows Explorer not sufficient?
Show folder size in bytes, kilobytes, megabytes and gigabytes is practical, does Tara Byte work too?
I don't need a free application that should help me calculate the automatic size of all folders on my PC in bytes, kilobytes, megabytes and gigabytes.?