The Cookies To Delete should clear after running CCleaner. If there are cookies left they are probably "Flash Cookies" which now also appear in that window.
Make sure you have "Adobe Flash Player" checked in "CCleaner\Applications\Multimedia". Also "Macromedia Shockwave" if you have it listed in the same section.
The Cookies To Delete should clear after running CCleaner. If there are cookies left they are probably "Flash Cookies" which now also appear in that window.
Make sure you have "Adobe Flash Player" checked in "CCleaner\Applications\Multimedia". Also "Macromedia Shockwave" if you have it listed in the same section.
Hope that helps.
I have been trying to get a solution to deleting cookies for months now. I'm using Firefox 3.0.11 with XP SP3 and have CC2.21.940.
I have about 1000 (!) items in the Cookies to Delete column that just will not go. Firefox tells me they are not there but CC finds them from somewhere.
I think I have tried all the tick box options (index.dat, Flash Player etc)
I've attached a screen print in case it helps. (couldn't work out how to do it other than to paste into Word)
NOTE- I never had this problem until a few months ago so I'd guess it's due to an update of something.
After install paste the INI file into the CCleaner folder.
By default, CCleaner's settings are saved in the Registry. If you select this option, they will be saved to the ccleaner.ini file in the CCleaner program directory.
You can use this option to copy your CCleaner settings to a new computer just by copying the ccleaner.ini file.
Also, once you've selected this setting, your desktop CCleaner installation is now a portable installation. Simply copy the contents of the CCleaner program directory onto a USB drive and you can use it on any other PC.
I've never done anything other than download and install the latest version on top of the previous.
Anyway, I've now followed your instructions: uninstalled and copied back the INI file on a new installation.
Unfortunately, the situation hasn't changed.
CCleaner still gives me a list of about 1000 in the Cookies to delete column.
Do you have any more suggestions?
Is there anyway to determine where these cookies are?
FOUND THEM!
Three years ago I put in a new hard drive but left the old one there.
Those files were in WINDOWS/COOKIES on that drive.
What's odd is that they never showed up until about 6 months ago.
It's almost as if there was a change to CCleaner that started to look at all available drives but would only clean the one where it itself was installed.
Is that possible?
Is there a way to tell CCleaner to analyse specific drives and then to choose which to clean?
There is a selector for drives to "wipe free space" but that's not relevant, I think. Or is it?
As far as I know, CCleaner will only analyze and clean the drive and operating system it is installed on like C drive.
Did you empty that folder to see if that clears your cookies to delete list?
Some users use the options > include to custom clean files and folders on other drives keeping in mind this is an advanced option and should be used with caution.
Those files were in WINDOWS/COOKIES on that drive.
As far as I know, CCleaner will only analyze and clean the drive and operating system it is installed on like C drive.
Did you empty that folder to see if that clears your cookies to delete list?
Some users use the options > include to custom clean files and folders on other drives keeping in mind this is an advanced option and should be used with caution.
The situation seems to be this:
I had an original c: drive working with Windows ME.
I installed a new drive that I partitioned and I have been running XP on F: drive. I simply left C: drive there as was.
CCleaner worked fine at finding and removing my cookies on F: until about 6 months ago when it found lots of extra cookies but would not delete them.
Those cookies, I have now found on c:windows\cookies. I simply deleted them from that folder, ran CC and,lo and behold, it could find none to delete.
It would appear that a CC update in the recent past started to look at other drives but, although it finds the cookies there, it does not clean them.
The only ways I know of CCleaner being able to access other drives, is through the include option and the new wipe free space option that was implemented in February.
If you want to you could exclude C:\*.* drive to avoid any future problems. Options > Exclude > Add Folder > Select C drive then click OK.
The problem may be the way you've set up your drives as well as a change in CCleaner. The main thing is that your happy.