So, since the latest update my gallery has been getting absolutely clogged up with all the shit I don't wanna see. I read a lot of downloaded manga, and up until now a ".nomedia" file in the folder made sure it never showed up in my gallery. Now, ever since the latest Android 12 update, my phone completely disregards them for anything new I download. Even turning the folder into a systems folder did absolutely nothing. What the hell? Is there a fix for this? Will there be.?

I have images, which are read from sdcard only by particular application so I want to hide it from image gallery. I have put .nomedia file in it, but this file is ignored, images are still showing in Gallery. I have put it with "." in the beginning. Still not working. Any ideas?


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MediaScanner on Android 4.0 fails to forget already-indexed files when it encounters a .nomedia file, but it does honor it if it's present on the first pass. So the workaround is to simply rename the directory. Of course you can change the name back after the next scan, if you like.

You can force the gallery to re-index after you created the .nomedia file by renaming the folder, run gallery (the "hidden folder should now be missing), and rename the folder back to what you want. It should remain hidden.

With Media Storage 4.1.1 on my Samsung Galaxy Note 2, none of the tricks given above works fully, in this sense: directories containing .nomedia files are still scanned, which can drain the battery a lot (though the result is ignored in the gallery), and also directories with names starting with a '.' are still scanned :-(

I resorted to using the "Media Scanner Root" app, which allows to disable the crappy media scanner altogether. This is apparently achieved by something like pm disable com.android.providers.media/com.android.providers.media.MediaScannerReceiver

A NOMEDIA file is an empty text file stored on an Android mobile device or external storage card. The file marks the folder it resides within, as well as that folder's sub-folders, as having no multimedia data. This tells multimedia players, gallery apps, and other apps looking for media files to skip the folder when scanning for media files. NOMEDIA files have no filename prefix; they are named just .nomedia.

Android's NOMEDIA files have several uses. For example, if you want to exclude a folder containing sensitive photos from your phone's Gallery app, you can create a .nomedia file in that folder. Then, the folder's photos will not appear in Gallery.

The .nomedia file has to be the first file in a folder in order to ignore media there. If files are already indexed, just rename such folders forth and back (opening the Gallery in the middle) and there you go.

The problem is that SAF creates a file called nomedia.txt instead of the dotfile. I played around with a few different mime types in the application/* range but then no file gets created at all. Glad for any pointers :)

An alternative way, as suggested by beeshyams, is to rename the parent folder and make it start with a dot. This has the same effect as having a .nomedia inside it, as both ways make the code return true (should be ignored).

Yes I too believe it would be a very useful option for android devices because with so many attachment folders created by obsidian in the long run the android gallery will show dozens of totally useless folders crammed with useless images.

Really inconvenient to have to add by hand a .nomedia file for each attachment folder. It would be less problematic using a single attachment folder for everything, as obsidian allows, but it involves writing internal links with relative or absolute paths that sometimes give compatibility problems outside obsidian.

I renamed a folder in my Android device to ".nomedia" in order to exclude its contents from the media scanner. However, after doing so, the entire folder seems to have disappeared from my device. I've checked various file management apps and even tried searching for it through a computer connection, but the folder is still disappear.

Is it possible that the folder was deleted after being renamed to ".nomedia"? I checked the storage on Google Play Store, which shows my device has a total of 242GB, but when I connect it to the computer, it only displays 225GB.

You need to place an empty file named ".nomedia" in the folder that should not be scanned for media. On my Phone I can create and delete folders with the name ".nomedia" with a file manager without any problems. It seems that you have deleted the folder after all as a result of mismanipulation.

Poweramp uses its own folder tree editor, rather than relying on system functionality. Not sure why it would be any easier to copy a .nomedia file into every folder you want to ignore, compared to just unticking the folder names from a list?

OK, so some may not want it but an option to ignore them would be good for those that do. I had hopes given it was on the list for inclusion back in 2012 but I guess I'll not be using powereamp then as I already use .nomedia as a generic flag across all other apps and to have to configure one separately from all the others would be a pain.

When it comes to ease of use, it very much depends on each user and how they have their stuff working. Some applications automatically create a .nomedia file to exclude its contents from other applications because being visible in them does nothing but increase the clutter. Some applications create a hidden cache folder and it gets added in Poweramp.

The majority of .nomedia files are stored on the external storage and internal storage of Android smartphones. The Android OS renamed the original files into the .nomedia extension to tell other applications that there are no media. As a result, they are not indexed, identified, or scanned by the multimedia players but still have the essential data for renaming the original files.

These files are stored in the default storage manager of Android phones. While some phones allow the users to view the files, most Android smartphones keep them hidden, but you can recover .nomedia files pretty quickly by using the instructions from this section.

As the name suggests, this is a file extension found in Android smartphones and is the .nomedia file. These are particular files that don't have a name and tell other apps to prevent scanning of different media files within the same folder where there are no media files. It can hide unwanted ringtones, private pictures, and other unwanted data.

Reading the .nomedia files is impossible unless you change the file's name. Changing the file can be done by pressing the F2 key on your desktop's keyboard. Once the file is renamed, double-click the file, and you will be able to read the file's contents.

.nomedia files are critical and common on Android smartphones since it allows users to hide their media files to keep them secure. For this reason, losing these files means losing all the smartphone's data. Still, you can depend on the tips and methods mentioned by iMyFone D-Back Android Recovery to recover all the .nomedia files without losing the data integrity.

i was using .nomedia file from long time to hide the images and video in a particular folder but that same seems to be not working in android 

as Samsung stock galary always shows the images even i tried hiding the folder from galary app but then when i switched to photo from folder mode still it was visible... how to fix this?

This file format creates blank files that can disable media scanning within Android directories where they're placed. This means a .nomedia file in an Android directory will instruct Android apps to ignore any media file stored in that directory. This can significantly reduce the Android app's load time and speed up its media scanning tasks.

NOMEDIA files can be created by renaming any file and its extension as .nomedia. For example, suppose you don't want your music player app to scan specific directories in your Android device. In that case, you can rename any unimportant image or music file in those directories as a .nomedia file. You can also place blank text documents in those directories and rename them NOMEDIA.

A .nomedia file can be opened using any supported Android text editing app. These NOMEDIA files can also be opened with text editing programs on your PC or Mac. However, there won't be any use in opening these .nomedia files, so it's best to leave them where they are. You can delete them if you want certain apps in your Android device to scan the media files in those directories.

Example: A .nomedia file in Music folder hides cover art files in the Gallery but prevents the Music app on my Android device to play all the audio files I synchronized to it. Excluding the .nomedia file from synchronization is not the best solution.

say you have your music library. you put in a .nomedia in OC/NC to avoid all the little folder/cover.png to show up in the slideshows.

The effect is, that you will not be able to play the music on Android.

If this is the case for you, you might be wondering whether it is possible to recover nomedia files on Android phone. The good news is that there is a way to do it quickly and easily. In this article, you are going to learn everything you need to know about these files and how you can retrieve them without much effort.

Before we start explaining how to recover nomedia files on Android phone, it is important that you understand what these files really are and why they are used. In essence, renaming a file as nomedia is a way to put the "do not index" label on any files. By doing this, you are preventing the apps on your phone from accessing, scanning, or indexing their content.

If you are wondering where nomedia files are stored on your device, then you will have to use a file manager to view them. Those files are usually stored in hidden folders, which can be found in both the external and the internal memory space of your Android device. For this reason, they might be very tricky to spot, as you need to know how to view hidden files. 2351a5e196

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