Ok, thanks for the tip, but I'm suggesting a better way; using check boxes.
Welcome to the forums!
Sounds like a good feature actually! Who knows how the dev team would implement such a thing though like your check boxes preference, or something already built into Windows like highlighting what to remove with Alt+A ("to select all") or Alt+A+Click (to deselect a single item).
Wait so are you suggesting that for the cleaner section you have something like is there for registry?
not so sure that'd work what with the fact that there can be thousands of internet cache alone
for instance I just booted my computer, this is the only page i've been to and I already have 914 temporary internet files
most people don't understand t.i.f.s enough to know that they are all ok to delete and so they'd be going through a checking each one.
No, all the temp files are grouped under one... so from the 'results' you can check everything you want to remove. For example, everything except the 'Recycle Bin'.
Sounds like a good feature actually! Who knows how the dev team would implement such a thing though like your check boxes preference, or something already built into Windows like highlighting what to remove with Alt+A ("to select all") or Alt+A+Click (to deselect a single item).
Hello,
Thanks for welcoming me, and thanks for the support!
It shouldn't be too hard to implement. It's no rocket science, really
Wait so are you suggesting that for the cleaner section you have something like is there for registry?
not so sure that'd work what with the fact that there can be thousands of internet cache alone
for instance I just booted my computer, this is the only page i've been to and I already have 914 temporary internet files
most people don't understand t.i.f.s enough to know that they are all ok to delete and so they'd be going through a checking each one.
As ishan_rulz said:
No, all the temp files are grouped under one... so from the 'results' you can check everything you want to remove. For example, everything except the 'Recycle Bin'.
So that won't be a problem, because I mean every group, not every single file hehe
So isn't that already available by not checking the boxes (which are already available) in the first place?
i.e. if you don't want recyclebin just uncheck it before you analysis and/or clean.
I'm not trying to be a nay-sayer just trying to wrap m'head around this idea.
Yes, that's one possibility, but I'm suggesting a feature that allows you to check boxes after scan as well, not only before.
Let's say I'm scanning all items. It takes like 40 seconds. Then I realize "Oh, I don't want to remove Google Chrome passwords.". In that case with this current version, I'd have to uncheck it in the menu to the left, and then rescan, wasting another 40 secs.
After trying to conceive what he wanted, I think I have the answer.
Although technically you can uncheck an item after a scan, then rescan, he must be wanting a "live" checkbox. That is, CCleaner updates the information on the fly. You can uncheck or check items while CCleaner is cleaning instead of wasting the time to do another scan.
This might, however, be a little tricky to achieve.
Shouldn't be too tricky I'd think since it could have 'Run Cleaner' greyed out until after 'Analyze' is ran, like how the registry cleaner works in CCleaner.
After trying to conceive what he wanted, I think I have the answer.
Although technically you can uncheck an item after a scan, then rescan, he must be wanting a "live" checkbox. That is, CCleaner updates the information on the fly. You can uncheck or check items while CCleaner is cleaning instead of wasting the time to do another scan.
This might, however, be a little tricky to achieve.
You got that right!
It should not be too complicated, as mentioned. Programming is not really limited in what you can create. ^^
Whilst waiting for this to be implemented you could of course run Anaylse, then uncheck the boxes on the left that you don't want to clean, and just run Clean without the second Analyse. CC probably does an internal analyse anyway, but it would save one click and a few seconds.
Whilst waiting for this to be implemented you could of course run Anaylse, then uncheck the boxes on the left that you don't want to clean, and just run Clean without the second Analyse. CC probably does an internal analyse anyway, but it would save one click and a few seconds.