This is a problem I found during the use of Windows XP. I did not test it on other versions of the operating system. I wonder if the same problem exists.
Assume that your directory contains two image files of the same size (length and width, not file size), such as a.jpg and B .jpg. Now, delete a.jpg and rename B .jpg to a.jpg, or copy an a.jpg file from another directory.
In the thumbnail view mode, you will be surprised to find that the thumbnail of the renamed B .jpg file (or copied a.jpg file) turns into the thumbnail of the deleted a.jpg file! In the slide view mode, you can see that the larger image on the top is different from the thumbnail on the bottom.
You must be thinking that something like cache is working. However, whatever the refresh, or even restart the computer, the thumbnail will become the real thumbnail of the current file.
I wonder whether this is a bug in Windows XP. It is difficult to figure out how Windows XP obtains data to display thumbnails.
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