maximize compatibility file size quirk
Under Windows 10, in both the current version of Photoshop CS6 and the current version of Photoshop CC, small changes to text have an inconsistent effect on file size when the file handling preference Maximize Compatibility... is set to Always.
For example, I have 100 files with file names ranging from Jun (1).psd to Jun (100).psd, containing only several text layers, each containing a few words of text, all in the same typeface. The files differ from one another only in a single detail: the third text layer contains a couple of digits (in addition to several invariant letters) has a change in the digits, from 1 to 100, matching the file names. The other text layers do not differ at all. Files that contain that text layer with the digits 1, 21, 31, 41, 51, 61, 71, 81, and 91 have a file size of over 64 MB when saved with Maximize Compatibility set to Always, whereas all the other sets of digits (2, 3, ...10, 12, ... , 20, 22, .. etc) have a file size less than one MB. When Maximize Compatibility is set to Never, all files are the same size, less than 1 MB, regardless of the digits in the variable text layer. It does not matter which of two computers or which version of Photoshop is used. It does not matter what the file names are. Under Maximize Compatibility = Always, replacing a large file with a copy of a smaller file containing a different number reduces the file size, but if the file is subsequently edited to introduce a 1, the size increases again. The only variable that seems to have any effect is the last digit of the numerical value, which triggers the size increase when equal to 1.
Weird, huh? Does anybody else see this?
