

You can open or delete any file or folder that shows up in the results.Context menu supports means you can open TreeSize Free to any folder or drive through Windows Explorer.The interface can be changed to better support touch devices.A filtering option can exclude or include results based on a certain pattern for example, you can include ISO files only so that you can remove all other file types from being displayed in the program.Values can be shown in KB, MB, or GB the Automatic Units option changes the unit used for each file/folder based on its size for easier reading.The largest folders under any parent folder are easily identifiable with the highlight behind their text (this color can be changed in the settings).Folders can be sorted by size, total percent of space occupied in relation to other times under the same parent drive/folder, last modified date, and the total number of folders/files it contains.Can change the results to see a TreeMap version, giving you more of a perspective of the size difference between the subfolders. TreeSize is a free disk management utility from Jam Software that helps track your computer’s storage space.Displays results in a structure similar to Windows Explorer.Windows XP through Windows 10 are supported.

At which point, you'll have the data necessary to see which folder is eating all the space. To see the folders under C:\Windows that are greater than 1 GB in size, we ran the following command: diskusage /minFileSize1073741824 /h c:\windows As you can see below, DiskUsage listed all. You can use a storage visualizer such as WinDirStat and point it to the Thunderbird profile. You can try a utility like SpaceSniffer or WinDirStat to see where the space is actually being occupied so you know what to delete.Ģ0 gigs definitely sounds excessive, are you sure this is a result from Stacher? You can use a tool like windirstat () to visually see what on your system is using that space.

I suddenly found that my C drive free space was eaten! Or wiztree to check what’s taking up your hard drive’s space. GrandPerspective is a small utility application for macOS that graphically shows the disk usage within a file system. You could try using disk usage analyzers like windirstat Keeping Up With the Kshahrewars - General Questions and Discussion Thread I suggest you don't actually go deleting things at random.

Since you have zero idea what you are doing. You can use WinDirStatto see the full breakdown of your drive.
