Am I stuck forever with FreeFileSync 13.3?

Discuss new features and functions
Posts: 13
Joined: 21 Mar 2019

Widowsky

FreeFileSync 13.4 ignores leading/trailing space when matching file names, according to its release notes. I can hardly believe my eyes.

I constantly use leading spaces in file and folder names to prioritize them at the top of lists on macOS. I'm no coder nor developer and please people, don't patronize me telling what I should or shouldn't do.

Am I understanding correctly, and does this mean that I won't be able to update FreeFileSync?
Posts: 309
Joined: 7 Jan 2018

bgstack15

Hm, perhaps that can be a feature request: to ignore trailing spaces with a checkbox in the settings dialog.
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Joined: 21 Mar 2019

Widowsky

So we're not free to call our files and folders whatever we want?

That's so wrong, it's simply unacceptable.

Misguided idea to prevent so-called user errors should remain an option and certainly not be imposed on everyone. Users don't make mistakes, only developers do.

FreeFileSync is a file synchronizer; it's not a batch file renamer.
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xCSxXenon

Users don't make mistakes
LOL I see you're one of "those users"

Using spaces as an organizational method is simply ill-advised and you shouldn't do it. You are literally locking yourself into a flawed way of doing things that is going to cause you problems later. But as you say, there's no law against making bad decisions ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

With that said:
You're misunderstanding the feature. FreeFileSync still treats these file names as different, but matches them as pairs after comparison. Zenju, 05 Mar 2024, 07:12
viewtopic.php?t=11134
Posts: 13
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Widowsky

Users don't make mistakes
LOL I see you're one of "those users"xCSxXenon, 21 Mar 2024, 14:11
What I meant, more precisely, is that users make mistakes, realize them, correct them, and learn from this process, thus becoming better users. If steps 2 to 4 cannot occur, it's not the user's fault.

Yes, this might be exactly what's happening to me right now, learning from a mistake.

Except that I present my case only as an example among others. There are necessarily plenty of reasons to use leading and trailing spaces in file names, all valid from the perspective of those who use them.
Using spaces as an organizational method is simply ill-advised and you shouldn't do it. You are literally locking yourself into a flawed way of doing things that is going to cause you problems later. But as you say, there's no law against making bad decisions ¯\_(ツ)_/¯xCSxXenon, 21 Mar 2024, 14:11
My way of doing things isn't "flawed", it's locally adapted to my situation ┌(^_^)┘♪└(^_^)┐
With that said:
You're misunderstanding the feature. FreeFileSync still treats these file names as different, but matches them as pairs after comparison. Zenju, 05 Mar 2024, 07:12
viewtopic.php?t=11134 xCSxXenon, 21 Mar 2024, 14:11
Thanks for the link and explanation, I'll see with use.

I still expect unintended consequences and apparently not the only one.
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xCSxXenon

I still expect unintended consequences and apparently not the only one.
My way of doing things isn't "flawed", it's locally adapted to my situation
I constantly use leading spaces in file and folder names to prioritize them at the top of lists on macOS
You are expecting unintended consequences for intentionally doing things in a flawed way because of a situation you fabricated on your own. Gotcha
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Joined: 22 Aug 2012

Plerry

There are people using a chisel as a screwdriver.
Sometimes it works, sometimes they hurt themselves doing so.

If you, Widowsky, being forwarned, do not want to abandon using leading spaces in file/folder-names (using a chisel as a screwdriver), so be it; at some time you will surely hurt yourself.

If you are open to a robust (even cross-platform) method of achieving the same result (bringing items to the top of your list):
Use another leading character than a whitespace.
A good and optically little intrusive option is to use the underscore character "_" .

I am a Windows person, but there even seems to be a built-in tool in MacOS to automatically change file- and foldernames. Very likely you can also use that tool to replace (just) leading spaces by some other character, per my proposal the underscore character.
If you want to have even more control over the sequence in which files and folders are listed, you may consider adding one or more leading digits to the name, e.g. "000_FilenameX", "007_FilenameY", "234_FilenameZ" etc.
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Joined: 21 Mar 2019

Widowsky

Once again, my case is just one example among many. The unintended consequences concern other users.
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Joined: 21 Mar 2019

Widowsky

Hm, perhaps that can be a feature request: to ignore trailing spaces with a checkbox in the settings dialog. bgstack15, 21 Mar 2024, 12:56
That would be the sensible thing to do.