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El capitan force empty trash
El capitan force empty trash












el capitan force empty trash
  1. #El capitan force empty trash how to#
  2. #El capitan force empty trash free#

While quite a few hardy climbers have now free climbed El Capitan, only one person has free soloed El Cap at the time of writing this article. Other issues sometimes occur, like the mouse going AWOL (unplug/replug for that issue).El Cap is so massive it can be difficult to see climbers on it with the naked eye (Image credit: Cavan Images) The sleep problem with USB3 drives can happen sporadically, for reasons MPG does not understand. MPG: Terminal always works, so barring yet some other bug, Dave must be doing something not quite right.Īs for USB errors, Apple’s USB implementation is not entirely reliable, which is one reason RAID via USB is not such a great idea. This has happened with two different backup drives of different brands. I have to force eject the drive, reconnect, then start the backup again. I wanted to add that another annoying issue is having “Let hard disks sleep” checked randomly makes my external USB3 drives unable to write to so my CCC backup fails. The Terminal hack unfortunately doesn’t work so I have to log out and log back in to fix it. Just wanted to pass along that I’ve been having -43 errors ever since 10.11.3 and it’s driving me nuts. Multiple files can be dragged at once, now a common practice for me. This executes the 'rm' command, removing the file.ĭiglloydMP:MPG lloyd$ rm /Users/lloyd/Desktop/BreakthroughPhotography_X3_Spectral-BT\,hd.jpg Drag the file to the Terminal window (which will insert its path as shown in red below).Type “ rm ” (don’t forget the space after 'rm').Short of logging out, one way to delete a file is to use the 'rm' command in Terminal:

#El capitan force empty trash how to#

How to delete files using Terminal (command line) Update: see also Apple takes its eye off the ball: Why Apple fans are really coming to hate Apple software.

el capitan force empty trash

The mainstream cheerleader press is even getting the hint: Walter Mossberg has finally noticed the crust of snow atop the tip of the iceberg, but he is clueless about just how deep the problems run. MPG observed the warning signs as early as 2011, and first reported on it in explicitly in early 2013. More bugs are added than fixed these days, and many obvious bugs never get fixed. It’s one bug of hundreds (well, surely thousands): Apple is in decline. But try to put into the trash and always a problem. It’s ridiculous really: a file can be duplicated, but neither the original nor the duplicate can be put into the trash. No other program has any issue at all with these files (opening, saving, copying, closing). But almost every day the Finder has this fit all over again. The only solution is to log out (or quite/restart the Finder), and hope the problem goes away for a while, which it usually does. Once this bug starts, it affects all files on the desktop. I can’t recall for sure, but I think it started with OS X El Crapitan. It can be dragged into Terminal to generate a path (as in 'rm') and that works fine also.īut once this Finder brain-fart occurs, files cannot be put into the trash, generating an error alert as shown (-43 is File Not Found).

el capitan force empty trash

Get Info and Duplicate work, but file cannot be trashed (OS X El Capitan 10.11.3 Finder)įiles on the desktop exist: Get Info works, and the file can even be duplicated or moved.














El capitan force empty trash