I'm not seeing any deleted posts in this thread, look more carefully.Pls lock the thread... OP is deleting his posts which makes the question ambiguous...
Because most won't. Don't listen to me,try it for yourself.OP didn't say what program, so why should we conclude that it won't work?
Steam and Epic (Gog and Origin too,I think) can be moved like you say,but each has a kludgy way of doing it. Almost like they don't want you to. You'll find yourself checking the internet for how (most likely asking here-I think I did at one time). It is not copy and paste and telling Epic/Steam go here to run the game. They try and download the game again (at 20Gig plus combined with Comcast and other ISPs metering,that can hurt).If the program in question is a Steam or other publisher launcher game, those will often have an in-launcher option to move software to other drives or at least have an option to re-scan for installed software and handle fixing whatever needs fixing.
For most normal software though, you'll need to do a re-install.
I moved 500GB worth of games from my WD Black HDD to my 1TB 860 EVO last week. All I had to do was cut-and-paste my Stem folder on the other SSD then add the new Steam library to Steam's database. Once you tell Steam where the library moved to, it will RE-SCAN the whole thing during which you may see 20-200MB/s of storage activity but 0KB/s of network activity. Although the re-scan process shows up as downloads in the update/download tab, nothing actually gets downloaded unless Steam finds missing or damaged files.Steam and Epic (Gog and Origin too,I think) can be moved like you say,but each has a kludgy way of doing it. Almost like they don't want you to. You'll find yourself checking the internet for how (most likely asking here-I think I did at one time). It is not copy and paste and telling Epic/Steam go here to run the game. They try and download the game again (at 20Gig plus combined with Comcast and other ISPs metering,that can hurt).
Ok (not a big gamer),but I know with Epic I had a hard time. You would think you would find this easily on the Net. You'd be wrong.I moved 500GB worth of games from my WD Black HDD to my 1TB 860 EVO last week. All I had to do was cut-and-paste my Stem folder on the other SSD then add the new Steam library to Steam's database. Once you tell Steam where the library moved to, it will RE-SCAN the whole thing during which you may see 20-200MB/s of storage activity but 0KB/s of network activity. Although the re-scan process shows up as downloads in the update/download tab, nothing actually gets downloaded unless Steam finds missing or damaged files.
The hardest part of the process on Steam (at least for me) is remembering that the Steam Library Folders thing is under the Download page in setup.I can't remember,but I thought Steam wasn't all that intuitive. I'm probably wrong.
I'll keep it in mind! Maybe I never moved a Steam game-like I said,not much of a gamer. For now.The hardest part of the process on Steam (at least for me) is remembering that the Steam Library Folders thing is under the Download page in setup.
Thank you!Steam games location
In the steam client:
Steam
Settings
Downloads
Steam Library Folders
Add library folder
To move an already installed game
Games library
Right click the game
Properties
Local Files
Move Install Folder
Important information is written to the registry. Moving portable apps should go smoothly. Apps that are installed you may strike out a lot. Best to uninstall then reinstall to the new destination drive.When you install a program, the installer usually will ask you where to install, at this stage you can select the destination drive you want.
If the program is already installed, you can try to copy-paste it to the new location, most of programs will work, but some won't.
not sure if you all got what I'm asking for, I will try to explain again. for example if I uninstalled the Microsoft office, will I still have the setup file that will install the program again when clicking on it. ( setup file) is that the name of a program that hasn't been installed yet?
How did you install it before? If it was from a DVD, then you just have to install it again from the DVD (or better yet, make an image of it and mount it). If it was from something you downloaded from Microsoft, then you can just grab it from them.not sure if you all got what I'm asking for, I will try to explain again. for example if I uninstalled the Microsoft office, will I still have the setup file that will install the program again when clicking on it. ( setup file) is that the name of a program that hasn't been installed yet?
That information is mostly just how to tell Windows how to uninstall it, which amounts to just having an entry in the "Uninstall a program" section of Control Panel and where the uninstaller is (if there is one). If you reinstall the program, that entry just gets overridden. Even if an app uses the registry for settings for some reason, again, it just gets overridden at worst if the app is reinstalled before being uninstalled. And heck, it may be those entries don't get removed in the event of a reinstall so the user can get back right where they were.Important information is written to the registry. Moving portable apps should go smoothly. Apps that are installed you may strike out a lot. Best to uninstall then reinstall to the new destination drive.