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Forum Discussion
Gregg W.1
3 years agoHelpful | Level 5
How to programmatically make files available offline.
I have a Macintosh app that does not use the Dropbox api - however, my users do save the app’s data files & packages in a Dropbox folder. The problem is that recently users have been having file ...
Greg-DB
3 years agoDropbox Staff
No, unfortunately Dropbox doesn't offer an interface for programmatically managing this setting, such as to set a file to "offline", but I'll pass this along as a feature request. I can't promise if or when that might be implemented though.
- Gregg W.13 years agoHelpful | Level 5
Thanks for the prompt reply, even though it's not what I was hoping for.
I thought a customer of mine had reported double-clicking on a 'Zero byte' png file and the file downloaded from the Dropbox cloud and opened in Apple's Preview app.
If that's true, what is Apple's Preview app doing to trigger the download that I am not doing?
If it's not true, then I apologize for the diversion. I'm still getting a handle on how to deal with the 'Zero byte' files.
Gregg
- Rich3 years agoSuper User II
Gregg W.1 wrote:
I thought a customer of mine had reported double-clicking on a 'Zero byte' png file and the file downloaded from the Dropbox cloud and opened in Apple's Preview app.
That's how the feature used to work. If you tried to open an online-only file, the file would be downloaded to the computer and marked as Local. It would remain local until it was manually marked as Online-only again.
Ever since the change, the feature (formally called Smart Sync) now has three states; Available Offline, Available and Online-only. From what I've seen on the forums, Macs have had issues with files switching to Local or Available on the fly, and many have had to manually mark a file as Available Offline before they open it. Search the forums for those topics as other Dropboxers have commented and possibly provided solutions or work-arounds. I'm not a Mac user so I can't comment beyond that.
- Gregg W.13 years agoHelpful | Level 5
Thanks for the reply Rich.
That sounds like what my users are seeing - seemingly random files switching to online-only and dropping in size to zero bytes.
It does seem that the last modified date is being considered when deciding what files are getting moved to the cloud. That is, older files are being moved to the cloud and set to zero bytes. The trouble is that these older files are actually cache files that are being used on a daily basis.
I will search for other threads as you suggested.
Thanks.
Gregg
- Greg-DB3 years agoDropbox Staff
Gregg W.1 That would be a matter of the Dropbox desktop client, but I can only really help with the Dropbox API itself, so I'm afraid I can't offer insight on that. You may want to contact support for help regarding the desktop client behavior. Apologies I can't be of more help in that regard!
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