MORE INFORMATION
You can open the Find Fast Control Panel icon to create additional indexes
(for example, on a network drive), delete indexes, and set other options.
Although you can use Find Fast in the Control Panel, Find Fast indexes
Office documents automatically and requires no user interaction.
By default, Find Fast creates a single index on each hard disk on your
computer. Note that Find Fast does not automatically index files on
removable disk media. However, you may create multiple indexes on a single
drive, especially on shared or network drives. You can do this but you
cannot create indexes that overlap. For example, if a Find Fast index
exists on drive C, you cannot create an additional index for files in the
My Documents folder on drive C. To create an index of My Documents, first
delete the index for drive C through the Find Fast Control Panel icon.
Description of the Index Files
Find Fast index files are located in the folder in the topmost level in the
hierarchy of indexed folders. For example, if you index an entire drive,
the index file is located at the root of that drive. Find Fast index files
are hidden files. These index files and their functions are listed in the
following table.
File Name Type of File
---------------------------------------------------------
Ffastun.ffl Document list
Ffastun.ffx Index
Ffastun.ffo Cache of document properties
(for example, the author and title)
Ffastun0.ffa Status file
Because you create and maintain index files through Find Fast in the
Control Panel, it's not necessary to work with these files directly.
NOTE: Do not attempt to copy, move, or change the attributes of these file
types. If you must delete or move a set of indexed folders, first delete
the index through the Find Fast Control Panel icon, and then recreate the
index after you move the folders.
Index files typically require about 7 percent of the space of the text
portion of the documents that are being indexed, or about 1 - 3 percent of
the total document size.
What Files Can Be Indexed?
When you specify the type of documents to index in the Create Index dialog
box, Find Fast includes the document types that are listed in the following
table.
Document Type File Name Extension
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Microsoft Office files All the Microsoft Excel, Microsoft
Web documents PowerPoint, Microsoft
Project, and Microsoft Word document types
listed in this table. Microsoft Binder
(.odb, .obt) and Microsoft Access (.mdb)
files. Note that in .mdb files, only
document properties are indexed.
Microsoft Excel workbooks .xl* files
Microsoft PowerPoint files .ppt (presentation), .pot (template), .pps
(auto-running presentation) files
Microsoft Project files .mpp, .mpw, .mpt, .mpx, .mpd files
Microsoft Word documents .doc (document),
.dot (template), .ht* (Hypertext Markup
Language document), .txt (text file), .rtf
(Rich Text Format) files
All files *.* files
In addition to the Microsoft Office document types that are listed in the
table, Find Fast can index the following document types if the associated
conversion filters are installed and support minimal RTF mode:
Lotus 1-2-3 version 2.x - 4.0
RFT-DCA
Microsoft Works version 3.x for Windows
Word version 4.x - 5.x for the Macintosh
Works version 4.0 for Windows
WordPerfect version 5.x
WordPerfect version 6.x
WordStar
NOTE: When you click All Files in the Create Index dialog box, Find Fast
excludes file types that do not contain text, such as BMP, COM or EXE
files.
Creating an Index
You can specify the file types to index only when you create an index.
You cannot change the indexed file types for an existing index; you must
delete the index, and then recreate it. To create a Fast Find index, use
the following steps:
- On the Start menu, point to Settings, and then click Control Panel.
- Double-click Find Fast.
- On the Index menu, click Create Index.
- Under In And Below, select the drive or folder that contains the
documents you want to index.
This location is also where the index files are stored.
- In the Of Type box, click the file types you want to index.
- Click OK.
Deleting an Index
To delete a Fast Find index, use the following steps:
- On the Start menu, point to Settings, and then click Control Panel.
- Double-click Find Fast.
- On the Index menu, click Delete Index.
- In the In And Below box, click the location of the Find Fast index
you want to delete.
- Click OK.
For additional information on about disabling Fast Find, please see the
following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
158705 OFF97: How to Disable the Find Fast Indexer