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I'm using adobe photoshop to make a 700 inches width and 600 inches height using 72 pixels with transparent colors, my computer crashed. then i turn on my computer again and started it agian and it says ' cannot create document because the scratch disk are full. i'm searching for the photoshop history, i've installed it with default settings and by the time i first use it, the scratch disk is located at the startup. so umm... where's this photoshop history
so i can delete it so that my comp will work fast again!!!

2006-09-09 18:38:38 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Software

No, i'm making a website.

2006-09-09 19:14:10 · update #1

5 answers

You dont locate! There is nuthin to locate! You are tryin to put a picture into your program that is simply too large! What they flyin bejeejsus do you want a 58 foot long picture for? You gonna side your house with it? You gonna spend a million on a printer to print it dummy!

2006-09-09 18:58:02 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Photoshop uses a scratch disk (i.e., temporary disk space used for storing data and performing computations) when there is insufficient RAM for image editing. When there is insufficient RAM and scratch disk space to perform image editing operations, Photoshop returns the error "Scratch disk is full."

A common cause of insufficient RAM is unnecessarily large files. The higher an image's resolution, the larger the file. The larger the file, the more memory Photoshop requires, and the more likely Photoshop's scratch disks will become full.

To set the Scratch Disk preference:

1. Choose Edit > Preferences > Plug-Ins & Scratch Disks.

2. Choose the drive that has the most free space from the First pop-up menu.

3. Choose a second, third, or fourth drive, if available, from the Second, Third, or Fourth pop-up menus.

4. Click OK.

5. Restart Photoshop.

Checkout the link for more info and tips

2006-09-10 01:45:45 · answer #2 · answered by Austin Semiconductor 5 · 0 0

Photoshop uses areas of your hard drive as extra memory i.e. it writes and reads information to these areas.
If your hard drive is full, then Photoshop can not write to these areas.
If you have a second drive, nominate it as a scratch disk using Preferences> Scratch Disk.
If you do not have an additional disk, you will need to free up disk space by deleting files from your hard drive.

2006-09-10 01:41:22 · answer #3 · answered by Buzzy Buddy 3 · 0 0

The real question is why were you trying to make a photo 58'4" by 50'? You can probably go into the program files and search through the files till you find the culprit causing the damage and storage problem.

2006-09-10 01:42:13 · answer #4 · answered by deathdealer 5 · 0 0

complex stuff. check out over google and yahoo. that will may help!

2014-10-28 00:17:05 · answer #5 · answered by kenneth 3 · 0 0

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