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Being an adventurous guy, I tried a different approach. I simply deleted the offending file (RYouUpForIt.m4a) entirely from the Sample Clips folder and tried opening my project. I got a message saying the clip was missing but I clicked "Ignore" and PD continued the loading process successfully. I verified that my project worked OK once loading was complete.
Once verifying that my project worked, I simply closed it; I did NOT save it, either with the same name or with a new name. Is it possible that if I save the project with a new name then it would be saved without the offending file and I'd be able to open it again without the error message about a missing file?
Hi,
Simply put for this context, .pds files are structured like this - whatever is in the Media Library is saved within the .pds file. By that, I mean that the full file location address is hard coded into the .pds file, not the actual files themselves.
For example:
SRC="D:\Video Archive\Croatia 2017\Croatia 2017 01_08 0002.MP4" NAME="Croatia 2017 01_08 0002.MP4"
SRC="C:\Program Files\CyberLink\PowerDirector18\SampleClips\ntsc\Skateboard.mp4" NAME="Skateboard.mp4"
SRC="C:\Program Files\CyberLink\PowerDirector18\SampleClips\R You Up for It.m4a"
so, even if an asset is not used in the project (yet??) but is present in the Media Library, it will be identified in the .pds file.
Hence, if Preferences>Project>Automatically load sample clips....... is checked, then the sample clips will be in the Media Library and saved as part of the .pds project file, even if they are not used in the project.
Personally, I always start with a clean, empty library for a project, or use the rt click>Remove All Unused Content...... to give me a clean project file, if that is appropriate!
So, in your case, perhaps you can open your project, clean up the Media Library, using the above or manually whichever is appropriate, and then save your project under a new name. Check your "new" project for validity, if it is what you want and works fine, then delete the old project .pds file( or rename it [OriginalName].bak or whatever, and then rename your "new" cleaned up project file back to your original name, if that is important to you?
Sounds complicated but isn't really - as you found, if there is a problem file, corrupted, changed location, changed name etc. etc. and it is not needed in the project then identify it, remove from the Media Library, and re-save.
If the problem file is a critical part of the project, then that's a whole new ballgame!!
Cheers
PowerDirector Moderator
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