Either that or I just rarely to never used spaces in filenames and thus didn’t notice it until recently. Sure enough, I do see the same setup in PS7, leaving me to wonder (but not wanting to reset my prefs to test it) if perhaps PSCS uses a default of Unix enabled while PS7 had it disabled. Maybe someone else knows a trick that will work.ĭarn it Mark! □ I tend to think I’d have used Save for Web enough to have noticed that hyphenation before, yet I don’t recall ever seeing it. I’ve got a feeling we’re stuck with this nuisance for now. I’d expect to see something about that in the preferences, but I don’t. As it is, I don’t see any way to disable it. This sounds to me like a definite candidate for a "feature" removal in the next dot update of PS CS. That would definitely be a source of frustration since renaming a file isn’t as simple as one would think it should be. I can imagine someone with a website where many images have been used, and yet they decide to make some sort of global edit to those images, only to find the files have all been renamed differently upon being returned to them. Of course, if one is working on behalf of a customer who has farmed out image editing work to them, then the customer’s files should definitely be kept intact in the form they were provided. Although having good intentions, I think the reason this hyphenation was added in PS CS when renaming files with spaces in their names, was to ensure no problems with file names used in web URLs. Your situation sounds like a very good reason for Adobe to stop "hand-holding" users of Photoshop.
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