Read our Photoshop articles to find the latest news, tips, tricks, techniques and developments in graphics editing. Learn from experts how to maximize your Photoshop tools.  Home Photoshop Articles Replacing the Preferences File

Replacing the Preferences File


Few things can be as big a headache as a misbehaving Photoshop. Thankfully, replacing Photoshop's preferences file can do wonders when the program is acting up. Think of it as "Photoshop Aspirin." Here's how to do it, and a tip that makes it easy to do regularly.

The Preferences File
The Preferences file is where Photoshop stores all of your settings. The selections you make in Photoshop's eight sets of preferences. You'll find the Prefs under the Edit menu, except when using Mac OS X (Photoshop> Preferences).

The file can become corrupted, leading to all sorts of mysterious and unusual Photoshop behavior. If you delete the file, it forces Photoshop to create a replacement file the next time it runs. Without a preferences file available when it starts up, Photoshop uses the factory-set defaults.

Among the clues that the preferences file has gone bad are:
• Freezes and crashes.
• Unusual tool behavior.
• Menu commands unexpectedly not available.
• Missing or blacked-out icons in the Toolbox.
• Unusual colors for interface items.

The preferences file records more than just the selections you've made in Photoshop's Preferences. Ever notice how Photoshop remembers the size of the new document you created that last time? And your last brush for each of the painting tools? Even where you left each palette? (You can, of course, turn off that behavior in the Preferences.) These are just some of the other things that are recorded in the preferences file.

So what happens? How does it get corrupted? The preferences file is rewritten every time you quit Photoshop. One way to try to minimize the possibility of corrupting Photoshop's preferences file may be to allow sufficient time for the program to quit. While I've not been able to develop reliable testing data, it seems that interrupting the Photoshop shutdown by starting another program or beginning another operation may be a possible source of problems.WHERE DO I FIND IT?

Photoshop 7
Look for the file Adobe Photoshop 7.0 Prefs.
• Mac OS X:
• Mac OS 9:
• Windows XP and Windows 2000: Documents and Settings<username>Application DataAdobePhotoshop7.0Adobe Photoshop 7.0 Settings.
• Windows NT: WinNTprofiles<username>Application DataAdobePhotoshop7.0Adobe Photoshop 7 Settings
• Windows 98: WindowsApplication DataAdobePhotoshop7.0Adobe Photoshop 7 Settings

Note that in Windows XP, you must have hidden files visible to find the Prefs file. Here's how to do that:
1. Choose Tools> Folder Options and then click the View tab.
2. Select "Show hidden files and folders" in the "Hidden files and folders" section, and then click OK.

Photoshop 6
For Both Windows and Mac, you're looking for the file named Adobe Photoshop 6 Prefs. Here's where it hides:
• Mac OS: System> Preferences> Adobe Photoshop 6 Settings> Adobe Photoshop 6 Prefs
• Windows 98: WindowsApplication DataAdobePhotoshop6.0Adobe Photoshop 6 Settings
• Windows NT: WinNTprofiles<username>Application DataAdobePhotoshop6.0Adobe Photoshop 6 Settings
• Windows 2000: Documents and Settings<username>Application DataAdobePhotoshop6.0Adobe Photoshop 6 Settings.

Photoshop 5.5
The file is named Adobe Photoshop 5.5 Prefs. You'll find it:
• Mac OS: Adobe Photoshop 5.5> Adobe Photoshop 5.5 Settings
• Windows (all versions, including Win 95): Program FilesAdobePhotoshop 5.5Adobe Photoshop 5.5 Settings folder
Photoshop 5
The file is named Adobe Photoshop 5 Prefs. It's in:
• Mac OS: Adobe Photoshop 5.0: Adobe Photoshop Settings
• Windows (all versions): Program FilesAdobePhotoshop 5.0Adobe Photoshop Settings

How Do I Replace The Preferences File?
In Photoshop 7, replacing the Prefs is as easy as pressing down Command-Option-Shift (Mac) or Control-Alt-Shift (Windows) immediately after you start launching Photoshop 7. (Don't hold down the modifier keys before you launch, press them immediately afterward and hold them down until you see the dialog box.)You'll be asked in you want to delete the "Adobe Photoshop Settings File." Rather than replacing the Photoshop Prefs file, this replaces the entire Settings folder, include Color Settings, Actions, ToolPresets, and all of the other settings files.

Rather than losing all of your settings, you can manually replace just the Prefs file:
• Quit Photoshop.
• Locate the Adobe Photoshop Prefs file.
• Delete the file.
• Restart Photoshop.
• Reset your preferences.
• Reload any custom palettes.

Special Tip: Minimize Preferences Disruption
You can prevent corruption of the Prefs file by making it a Read Only (Windows) or Locked (Mac) file. Remember, though, that Photoshop won't be able to update the file, so make sure that all of your preferences, palette locations, and tool settings are just as you want them before securing the Prefs file.

On the Mac, locate the file and press Command-I to open Show Info (OS X) or Get Info (earlier versions). You'll see a check box that allows you to lock the file.

image 1

For Windows, right-click on the Prefs file and select Properties. Check the Read-only box.

If you want Photoshop to be able to update the Prefs, don't lock the file. Rather, use this tip, which makes replacing your preferences file less difficult.

Replace your preferences:
• Quit Photoshop.
• Locate the Adobe Photoshop Prefs file.
• Delete the file.
• Restart Photoshop.
• Reset your preferences.
• Reload any custom palettes.
• Immediately quit Photoshop again. Don't do anything that might change your preferences.
• Go to the appropriate location to find your brand new, freshly-customized Prefs file.
• Make a copy of that new file.
• Move the copy to a location other than the Adobe Photoshop Settings folder. (I recommend the next higher level, the folder in which you find the Settings folder.)
• Rename the file to the exact name of the actual Prefs file.
• Next time you need to fix a corrupt Prefs file, simply delete the old one and copy the file you just made into the Settings folder. Never move the file, always copy it. Keep this newly-created, clean-as-a-whistle Prefs file as a back-up. Use copies of it to replace a bad Prefs file , it will save you the trouble of resetting all of the preferences each time.

Note: Remember to quit Photoshop first. The program rewrites the preferences when you quit. If you replace the Prefs file while Photoshop is running, the old corrupt preferences may be written over your new file.

What about other photoshop-related preferences?
• ImageReady (versions 2, 3, and 7) writes in the Windows registry, but creates a preferences file on the Mac. Mac OS 9 users will find Adobe ImageReady 7.0 Prefs, Adobe ImageReady 3.0 Prefs, or Adobe ImageReady 2.0 Prefs tucked into the System> Preferences folder. In Mac OS X, look for the Adobe ImageReady 7.0 Settings folder in the same Preferences folder described above for the Photoshop Settings folder. Inside you'll find Adobe ImageReady 7.0 Prefs.

• Save for Web also write in the Windows registry, and also creates its own Mac preferences file. If you've got Photoshop 5.5 for the Mac, look in the System> Preferences folder for Adobe save for Web 1.0 Prefs. Photoshop 6 users need to find Adobe Save for Web 2.0 Prefs (in the same location). Photoshop 7 uses Save for Web 3.0, and you'll find it in the same location as the Photoshop Settings folder in OS X and in the Preferences folder for OS 9.

• Color settings information can also be reset by deleting a file. In Windows, look in the same location noted above for your version of both Windows and Photoshop. If you've got Photoshop 7 or 6, the file name is Color Settings.csf. Photoshop 5.5 for Windows names the file Color Settings.psp. On the Mac, look in your Photoshop Settings folder for the file named Color Settings.

• Photoshop 7 and 6 also generate preferences files for Actions, Brushes, Contours, Custom Shapes, Gradients, Patterns, Styles, Swatches, and ToolPresets (Photoshop 7 only). They will all be found in the same location as the general Photoshop preferences. Photoshop 5 and 5.5 generate these files only for Actions, also located with the general Photoshop preferences.


About the Author:

Pete Bauer Pete Bauer is the Help Desk Director for NAPP, as well as a Contributing Writer for Photoshop User and Mac Design magazines. His books include "Special Edition Using Adobe Photoshop 7" (with Jeff Foster), "Special Edition Using Adobe Illustrator 10," "Sams Teach Yourself Adobe Illustrator 10 in 24 Hours" (with Mordy Golding), and "Special Edition Using Adobe Illustrator 9." Pete writes documentation for a variety of computer graphics related products, as well as testing software for a number of companies. As a computer graphics efficiency consultant, Pete specializes in customized training programs. He is based in Columbus, Ohio, and can be contacted via Email.
Author's URL: Pete Bauer
Final results of our readers
New!
Passed through all the steps? Share your result!
Your result will be premoderated.
Please make sure you choose the right image.
 
 



Captcha

*Required fileds
Read our Photoshop articles to find the latest news, tips, tricks, techniques and developments in graphics editing. Learn from experts how to maximize your Photoshop tools. More Articles: Featured Materials | Fresh Materials | TutorialKit New Photoshop Tutorials

No comments yet...
Add comments to "Replacing the Preferences File"

Captcha