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PAGE CONTENT: One. EaseUS Partition Master - free up memory and space Two. Microsoft Fix-It tool Three. Turn off automatic spelling checking and grammar checking/dt Four. Delete Normal Template file Five.
Reset Word's Registry Entries I Can't Open Word Because There Is Not Enough Memory or Disk Space to Run Word 'While trying to open an existing Word.doc file, an error message comes up telling me that there is not enough memory or disk space to run Word. What's the problem?
![What Does Mean When Your Mac Says You Dont Have Enough Disk Space For Word What Does Mean When Your Mac Says You Dont Have Enough Disk Space For Word](https://nektony.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Startup-Disk-is-full.png)
I checked the laptop memory. It is running on an 8GB memory with free disk space of more than 389GB. What's worse, besides the Word application, the other Office suite including Excel and PowerPoint have the same issues.' Microsoft Word 2003/2007/2010/2013/2016/2017 cannot open usually, and an error message comes up telling that 'there is not enough memory or disk space to run Word', how do you react to this moment? If you do not know how to free up the memory or disk space for rerunning the Word application, read this article and apply the five methods here. Free up Memory Disk If the real case is just like what the error message accurately describes, by freeing up some RAM or disk pace will help resolve the issue happily.
EaseUS provides all Windows users with easy-to-use disk cleanup and optimization solution, and it was of great use when you received the insufficient disk space for Word running. It's the easiest and most expected way to solve the insufficient space for Word as the first method instructed, however, most of the time, the error is not there.
Even your computer has plenty of RAM and hard drive space available; the error can still happen. In this regard, you have to take four more fixes to remove the error permanently. Run Fix-It Tool The Fix-It tool is an inbuilt Microsoft Office tool which can repair many common Word problems.
Just visit the Microsoft support page and download the tool. If clearing the disk space doesn't help get rid of the not enough memory space on Word, try the software's way. Turn off the Automatic Spelling Checking and Grammar Checking Word 2003, Word 2002, and Word 2000 Step 1.
On the Tools menu, click 'Options', and then click the 'Spelling & Grammar' tab. Click to clear the Check spelling as you type check box. Click to clear the Check grammar as you type check box. Word 2007 Step 1.
Click the 'Microsoft Office' Button, and then click 'Word Options'. Click 'Proofing'. Click to clear the Check spelling as you type check box. Click to clear the Mark grammar errors as you type check box.
Delete the Normal Template Step 1. Press Windows + R and type cmd in the run box. Paste the command ren%userprofile% AppData Roaming Microsoft Templates Normal. Dotm OldNormal.dotm and press Enter.
Close the command prompt window and check if you can open the Word. Reset Word's Registry Entries.
Warning Be very careful and cautious in editing the Windows registry because any incorrect editing will result in serious operating system problems, for example, the computer will stop working. You're highly suggested to back up your computer, including the system and data before starting to fix the Word error in the Registry. EaseUS will give you a hand. Step 1. Press Windows + R keys and type cmd in the run box.
Use the folder list, navigate to HKEYCURRENTUSER Software Microsoft Office xx.0 Word, where 'xx' will display your version of Word. Right-click the 'Data' folder and pick 'Export' to save a backup of your current settings.
Right-click the folder again and pick 'Delete.' Open Word to check on the problem. If it still occurs, double-click the backup you exported to recover the settings, then perform the same procedure with the 'Options' folder.
This could easily be explained as the 120 MB of used data is likely for the data all the apps store in iCloud. Contacts, calendars, specific third party apps can have storage in iCloud. You can determine this by looking at the Manage Storage pane in settings app (see below). The warning you describe comes up when the expected size of the next backup is greater than the available free space. You can reduce the size of the expected backup on iOS as follows:. open the Settings app. tap iCloud.
tap Storage & Backup. tap Manage Storage.
tap the name of the device in question (It usually says this iPod touch, this iPhone or this iPad to help if you have many devices connected to iCloud.). Look at Next Backup Size If that is less than the available space, you may need to contact Apple support to have your account fixed on the server side. In most cases, you can toggle off the largest few items and then attempt a backup when the estimate is less than the available space. Once the backup is complete, you can tune the backups or manage your space as needed on iCloud. In my case, I have the problem that iCloud estimates my data usage to be 10.9GB, while I have chosen to back up maybe only 1-2GB. If I turn, for example, camera roll off or on again, it doesn't matter.
ICloud estimates this wild, high, far too much space to make a backup, and I even deleted my previous backup and started new, to be sure to 'reset' everything, but it doesn't help! My iPad only uses 2.2 GB, I have 2.8 left for the phone, and select 'no backup' for most, but the mail and a few programs like Skype and so on, altogether far less than '10.9' GB, probably only 1-2GB. This problem seemingly happened before, the iCloud backup grow out of control, like a classical Windows installation.
However, I now see that, as I deactivate more and more smaller applications, of a few kb size of their data, that the total usage decrease much more than these few kb which are stated for each app. This means that Apple seemingly underreports how much data they backup, from each app, or maybe the system counts too much, I don't know. It is not possible to deactivate all the apps at once, in the hope to get down to the 17MB which is stated on the first page, (e-mail and settings), so there will be a lot of job to make this work again.:-/.
I'm having the same problem. Just recently deleted and backed up again. It's showing as if I was backing up 2.7GB of data, but if you look at 'Next Backup' it's shown much smaller, like 800MB.
All the items I have sum those 800MB, but still the final backed up size is much bigger. Even deleting stuff from those 800MB, still got me near 2.2GB, but no less than that. Backups also take so much more than they should considering I've got good connecting, not so old iPhone and so little data – Jul 13 '16 at 16:54. I had this problem forever.
Went to the Apple Store to see if they had a suggestion, they just said buy more space. After messing around with this over the past year off and on when it annoyed me, I figured out that in my case it's because of my Messages history. Which doesn't show up in the Manage Storage Info screen. I went to Settings Messages and turn the message retention down to a year instead of Forever and it dropped from 8.3GB to 3.6GB.
So that was my solution. – May 10 '17 at 12:58.
For those who are still getting this problem with iOS 8 I tried using iCloud to backup for the first time (no data had been used). It said it couldn't as the backup would need 9.7gb. I tried just turning off the larger items but it was still at 7gb.
Quite bizarre that you need to tap the off toggle AND THEN TAP DELETE IN A POPUP ALERT!!! I mean, who on earth do they have in their UI department nowadays?
In my case I have about 500 (?) apps, each of which has to have the button toggled off and then the alert dismissed by tapping delete. This is quite bizarre as I had never turned all of these on AND there is no way that I could see of turning them all off to start with and then turning back on the ones I wanted. I presume that also means that for every app that I install from now on this will be set on and I will need to remember and explicitly turn it off. I have now toggled off about a fifth of them (and it has taken an eternity!) but I am still at 5.2gb so I need to keep going.
The supposed data size taken up by apps I am now down to is 1.8mb so obviously this has no relationship whatsoever to the size the iPad is intending to copy up to iCloud for the apps. I also have very slow internet so the prospect of waiting for 5gb to copy is laughable (probably months) so I'll need to go through all of them. Time has passed and I am now maybe half way down and my finger is getting sore from tapping.
This had better work! The phone rang, I talked to my brother about my ailing parents, I returned and my iPad had gone to sleep. ICloud Backup had been turned off and it appears I am back to the beginning! I give up!!!! The next guy I speak to who compliments apple's developers in any way is probably going to get a good thrashing - I don't think they could program their way out of a simple do while loop.