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All replies
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Helpful answers
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Feb 3, 2012 7:35 AM in response to mlangerby K T,I believe that is a 'version' of your original file that only contains changes at a given point in time.
See Lion's Help on: versions
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Feb 4, 2012 3:08 AM in response to mlangerby jian880821,I have the same problem after installing 10.7.3. Need help!!!
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Feb 4, 2012 5:25 AM in response to K Tby mlanger,I don't think that's it. The file is the same size and opens when I double-click it. And it doesn't go away when I quit iBooks Author. None of that is consistent with a versions file that only contains changes. It's as if iBooks Author suddenly thinks it needs to make a copy of every file.
Now I'm starting to wonder whether this is Mac OS 10.7.3 related. But it doesn't do it with other apps that support versions, so I don't know.
Maria
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Maria Langer, Author
iBooks Author: Publishing Your First Ebook
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Feb 4, 2012 7:31 AM in response to mlangerby K T,It is version/copy of your working iBA file(s). Before 10.7.3, these temporary/version files were not visible. We are waiting to see if this is a bug w/10.7.3.
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Feb 4, 2012 9:37 AM in response to K Tby mlanger,Is this is a "temporary" file, then why isn't it going away when I close the document and quit iBooks Author?
Although I agree that it's named like a temporary file, it must be a pretty serious bug in 10.7.3 if temporary files aren't deleted when the app quits. This particular file is 64MB; I can image eating up a hard disk with multiple versions of the same file just sitting around when they're no longer needed.
And this doesn't explain why I don't experience the same problem in an app like Pages, which also supports autosave and versions.
I hope you're right and, if it's a bug in Mac OS, it's fixed promptly! While I can manually remove these duplicates on my hard drive, I'd hate to fill my Time Machine backup with a lot of files I don't need.
Maria
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Maria Langer, Author
iBooks Author: Publishing Your First Ebook
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Feb 4, 2012 9:51 AM in response to mlangerby K T,As a 'version', it represents a snapshot of changes to your main file at a given point in time.
'versioning' is a part of Lion and is used by many applications from Apple. Those files are backed up, just like any other file on your drive that is present when TM does a backup.
See this article on versioning with OS X: OS X Lion: About Auto Save and Versions
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Feb 8, 2012 12:22 PM in response to mlangerby timotay89,I don't think it's with Lion. I've had Lion since it came out. iBooks Author didn't start doing this to me until I updated iBooks Author to 1.0.1. Before that, I never saw the files with the ~ at the end, but now they appear whenever I close the program. It's very annoying. They aren't exactly small files either.
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Feb 8, 2012 4:44 PM in response to K Tby limtc,Can these files be deleted?
I know they will be regenerated... but is it safe to delete them without losing anything?
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Feb 8, 2012 4:57 PM in response to limtcby K T,You will lose the context as represented for that book, at that point in time. It is 'safe' to delete them in the sense that it won't hamper your editing ability in whatever other versions you are still maintaining.
Are you adept at navigating versions from an app in Lion? If not, look at the top of a book's main window, and click where it says 'Edited' to see options.
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Feb 8, 2012 8:37 PM in response to K Tby limtc,I thought the one without the ~ is the current version. The ~ is the past versions.
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Feb 8, 2012 8:57 PM in response to K Tby limtc,What you said is - by deleting the one with ~, "You will lose the context as represented for that book, at that point in time. It is 'safe' to delete them in the sense that it won't hamper your editing ability in whatever other versions you are still maintaining."
If the one without the ~ is the current version, by deleting the one with ~, you should NOT lose the context as represented for that book at that point in time. You will only have the book a that point of time. What you lose is OTHER version. So it is the reverse.
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Feb 10, 2012 2:08 PM in response to K Tby 4phun,K T wrote:
I believe that is a 'version' of your original file that only contains changes at a given point in time.
See Lion's Help on: versions
KT you are correct.
To see this in action place the file you are working on you desktop. Then make a few changes in iBooks Author and see the 'phantom file' appear too on your desktop.
Save a version of all your work and see the tilded version disapear since it is no longer needed.
Neat! and it is defintely a feature of LION.
I read through some more posts and noted you updated to include correctly this appears with other Apple files on Mac. I work with all kinds of documents on the desktop and then clean up after the day is done by moving them elsewhere. TexEdit and other programs, even Preview at times produces this tilde version for a few minutes. It is data not commited yet.