Originally Posted by: Tem I checked a Shark file for file info on my Mac:
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Last night, I just had another/expanded idea regarding MRU.
Rather than have VC/VCP/Shark (or, any other app for that matter) keep track of the MRU information in the registry or in the "Program File" directory, save one baseline and subsequent, stamped history files in EACH DRAWING Folder.
For example, say one is a person who saves each drawing in steps as it progresses, maybe for historical or protection against crash and loss of too much progression all in one file. The user would initiate creation of a file. VC/VCP/Shark (or, any other app a developer distributes) would ask the user to indication whether or not to generate a seed which would serve as "DNA" for subsequent versions of the work. Files that are to be distributed with zero DNA would be "washed" or "stripped" of the seed so that valid or surreptitious queries across WANs/LANS/etc would not find sibbling or parent or descendent files.
The program would then on making a new file ask the user to generate the seed. Saved files would either have it or not, and if the user mistakenly says no to the seeding and regrets it, the user could drag and drop a "relative" file onto the one needing seeding, and then the app could do a deep inspection to determine a new seed ID. The more files dumped, the better the relationship can be structured.
Now, the actual timestamps, file names, and so on could be less important when searching for related files. Similar to when apps find duplicate text and photo documents. Versioning could be based on spawns of a file.
There was more I was thinking, but i feel my idea is a whole lot better than ms' and others' find file by date/time/name fragment and so on. I can only hope someone non-proprietary-minded devs take and popularize this so that for CAD purposes, it becomes a LOT easier to scan one's system and organize or lay out the progression and heirchial value of a file based on content quantity and content evolution. Of course, if one starts deleting massive contents of a file, the app could lose track, or it could keep the seed even though the two compared files may be nothing alike. So, Create/Save As Template/Non-Template might be one way to approach things so long as a user rigorously adheres to a personal workflow that evolves drawings of a given project.