One generally accepted method of solving application issues is to reinstall it and make it start over. Audacity doesn’t start over because of the hang-over effect caused by saving effects, plugins, setups and configs for graceful upgrades. Unfortunately, this just kills you if you do have damage in any of those processes.
Audacity leaves you with the impression that you started over when you have done no such thing.
I’ve been through the Man on installing the Mac version and it doesn’t appear to have a Burn It Off, Hose It Down and Start Over process. At least none I could find.
I want no part of the program left when I finish. How would I do that?
If there is such a process, it should be right up there in the first paragraph of the Man, in my opinion.
There are comparitively easy ways to get a total-wipe (I do it all the time when I am QA testing).
I have shortcuts on my desktops (W10 and macOS Sierra) that hve all the config stuff for prefs and settings and the plug-ins etc) - so when I want a total wipe I open up that folder from the desktop and delelete the entire contents. Restart Audacity and that folder gets repopulated with the clean-wipe.
The reason for the shortcuts is that on neither platform is it particularly easy to locate the folder (well I always find it so - it’s obsure on Windows an Mac hides it somewhat - I had to ask a Macolyte friend, taking my Macbook to the pub one night … )
I’ll have a think about putting some advice in the Manual along those lines (maybe on the install pages - maybe FAQ - maybe both)
I have no idea how Linux handles this, but I’m guessing there’s something similar you can do.
Yes, it used to be a regular, up-front searchable part of the Mac environment, but someone (probably rightly) found it was causing more problems than was worth the visibility.
You can get there with the Terminal/Command-Line as well, if your tastes go that way.
Last login: Thu Jul 13 00:46:33 on console
stella:~ koz$ cd …
stella:Users koz$ cd …
stella:/ koz$ ls
@Koz: can you please review the Mac page.
Would it be better if I advised using the Go command (i.e. Shift+Cmd+L to show the Library folder the click on “Application Support” and then “audacity”)
@Steve: can you please review the Mac page. And also note the P1 for an image update for the “FFmpeg library not found” on that page
In the green note div I’d expand on the first two bullet points:
• In the sidebar of a Finder window, click on your username (it will have a house icon beside it)
• Click on the View menu and select Show View Options
There is a possibility that the user has turned off display of the home/username in Finder Preferences, so perhaps we need to give the Go menu alternative to finding the Application Support folder? There’s also the possibility that they’ve hidden the sidebar.
BTW, in the dialog that results from Go > Go to Folder … you can type “~/Library/Application Support” so no need to confuse things by mentioning “username” in this context.
I wonder if CleanMyMac does all this? When I uninstall an app, I always get a dire warning that everything but everything associated with it is about to be trashed. (Presumably all my projects aren’t included in that!)
I’ve had problems with the new version that I’ll detail in a separate post, but I may opt to let CleanMyMac purge it all and start over. If so, I’ll look for those files and report back if it did indeed find and remove them.