*groans*
I've known for a while now that my game was sitting atop a hoard of orhpaned/broken crap that wasn't showing up in game but being loaded anyways...But because I'm a lazy bum, I never did anything about it....Loading times took an hour, from the moment I click on the desktop icon till I'm inside the house I want to play, and the lag was horrible, but I managed anyways.
I haven't played the sims for a while on my lappy tough, not since I transfered my neighborhoods and downloads (14 cd's worth) to my desktop computer since I had recently upgraded the RAM and it ran the game better. But I'm considering starting it up again on my laptop so I can play pets while I'm at school. This time I'm a little more cautious about adding more to the already swollen folders. Thus I figured a total clean out was in order.
I thought that I could delete everything, then redownload the stuff that I liked...this would give me a fresh start. But it also means that I'd lose those files that aren't available for download anymore.
This idea still isn't out of the question.
I'd never bothered with SimPE's scanners before so I thought I give it a try. I'm amazed at how well it worked for my clothing and hair foloders. All of the files were correlcty identified, and I was able to delete alot of things I had forgotten I ever downloaded. But what really needs work is my object folder. there's no telling how many objects I've deleted in game...and as a whole, this folder is by far the largerst in my downloads.
But why does it have to be so difficult to scan
Sure, it takes a while to go through all those files, but when I see "Scanning Material Overrides" (1/16414), then an hour an a half later, "Scanning Material Overrides" (18/16414) I draw the line. It would take a week to go through all that, at the rate it's inching along. Give or take, too long is too long.
I first thought to divide the folder up and scan it in sections...but the fact that I'm looking for orphaned meshes makes it challenging since I will need to scan the meshes with all of the recolors, at any one time. I thought I could move my meshes in to one folder, then divided my recolors up into many foloders. Id' move a recolor folder into the download foldler where the meshes are, scan, and then disable(easier to locate) the meshes that show up as having associated recolors. I'd leave SimPE, go to my downloads folder, and move out the files I disabled into a temporary folder somewhere else. Then I'd move another recolor folder in and repeat the process till I've gone through all the foloders. In the end, the only meshes remaining should be the ones that never showed up has having an associated recolor...and thus I've narrowed it down to the orphaned meshes......It would be a long process, but it was the best I could think of...till I actually looked at the number of files in my mesh directory. 3666.
That number in itself is discouraging.
In total, I have 10023 files in my objects folder. 2.90 G. I guess the problem is I have too much....
But that isn't what's got me so. It's that dern material overrides scanning that ticks me off. Even if there were just 500 files to scan I'd be mad, 1000? forget it. Over 10000? hah.
Maybe if it didn't take a minute or more to scan 1 one material override(whatever that is anyways). It's wasn't like this with my clothing or hair folders. I think I had 1 material override to scan for hair...18 for clothing...(does it deal with objects only? I might have some files misplaced
)
but anyways, it comes down to this beiing the problem. Praticallity is the issue...I can't leave my laptop active for the time required to scan all those files. So I wonder, how does everyone else manage? I know there must be someone out there who's used the orphan mesh scanner with there objects before...did you encounter this same problem? If so, how did you get by? Is it necessary to scan material overrides? Is it a step I can exclude? What can I do?
Any help or advice would be appreciated...even if it doesn't deal with the orphan mesh scanner. perhaps there's a better method or program out there to find these things
Anythign would be nice...but if all else fails, I guess I can go back to the delete everything idea...