I like to use TreeSize and WinDirStat. What else is out there, and why should I use it?
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closed as not constructive by Zoredache, Mark Henderson♦ Apr 11 '12 at 22:19
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Windirstat is great. I've used various others but always come back to windirstat |
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Scanner by Steffen Gerlach is definitely my favorite and in my opinion has a much more logical, intuitive, and useful UI than WinDirStat and TreeSize (the only other two I originally used). It's easy to see the specific end-of-the-nesting large files and recycle or delete them with a quick click. Navigate with a click and a parent folder button. Context for sections has Hide, Open, Recycle, Remove. Integrates well with Explorer (as I'm sure many do).
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Sequoia is very dated but it's the one I use. Gives an interesting visual overview of your drives/folders. |
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I use JDiskReport. I believe it was written as a demo of Swing controls as much as anything else, but it's always been good enough for me. |
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SpaceMonger is a good tool. Allows you to zoom in/out on a graphical block view of files. Larger file are bigger rectangles, smaller files are smaller. Very good tool. |
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Personally I like to use du from cygwin (but then I am a command line person, one of my colleagues referred to me as Mr Blackscreen when entering my office once...). Sometimes use a script that saves the output automatically, like the following:
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I have tried several now, and among these I prefer WinDirStat and TreeSize.But there are many to choose from:
Disk Usage - command line utility that reports the disk space usage for the directory you specify. By default it recurses directories to show the total size of a directory and its subdirectories.
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I second the WinDirStat choice. I always keep that handy when the MB(or GBs) start disappearing in bulk. |
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I found SpaceSniffer the other day. I also like Sequoia mentioned elsewhere. |
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DiskMon, Disk Usage are 2 examples of utilities from Sysinternals |
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I've tried every disk usage visualizer I could find, and I stick with Treesize Free. I much prefer the tree view as opposed to the 'stump view' or the boxes-in-boxes approach. |
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I must second Spacemonger. It is a very small file no need to install it works on every version of Windows I have tried it on. It will "map out" networked drives as well. |
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I like to have FolderSize installed. It gives you another column called Folder Size that you can use instead of the regular Size column. And it shows how much space that folder use. Much better than using a separate tool or right-clicking and waiting for it to count in my opinion. First time you "open a disk" in explorer it works like crazy for a while, just so you are prepared, but that only happens once every boot. So I don't mind it at all. Oh, and its tiny and all free =) |
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protected by voretaq7♦ Apr 11 '12 at 22:08
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I use 