Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi, so I use Adobe Illustrator for work. My latest project is creating a newsletter. The piece I created was 23 pages (or artboards) and is 1.3 GB. Now towards the end of the project, Illustrator keeps crashing, and I receive a message on my Mac reading "Your system has run out of application memory." I now realize my mistake of creating such a large file - My computer has 8 GB of RAM, and when the file was open I was using at least 6GB. However, I have a co-worker who has a computer with 32 GB of Ram, so I transported the file on a flash drive, and I was able to open it on his computer. From there, I separated my 1 file into multiple files (two pages at a time) thinking I could still open each piece individually and continue working. However, after this first occurrence with the larger file, Illustrator still crashes and I receive the same error message. I don't have ANY other applications open, and it still crashes. I understand why the 1.3 GB file was too much to run, but most of the smaller, individual files are less than 50 MB. I've never had this happen before. Some of the pages do have pictures and a good bit of effects (drop shadow, wrap text, blur, etc), but others simply have text and a few pictures. And my pictures are linked, not embedded.
I am currently using macOS High Sierra Version 10.13.6 and I have a 2011 iMac. My Memory is 8GB 1333 MHz DDR3 and all four of my memory slots are in use at 2GB each.
I understand the error I am getting means I need more memory, but I just don't understand how my smaller Illustrator files are using so much. I've created many smaller pieces and this has never happened before.
Thanks in Advance,
A
HI! So I finally got in touch with adobe support - using the live chat! And they got me in touch with an illustrator expert. He took over my computer and found that none of my preferences were saving when changed.
First, he went in and had to basically re-install a part of my illustrator files because they had been corrupted. Then, he went to preferences--> Plug Ins and Scratch Disks--> Then under your Scratch Disks, change the secondary disk from "none" to Macintosh! Mine has been working every
...This did not work for me but I found the solution on another form, simply uninstall all Adobe applications, including beta applications, then re-install Illustrator.
My original issue was that I couldn't change the settings within Illustrator since the application would not open. After completing the steps above, I was able to go into Illustrators Settings > Plug-ins & Scratch Disks > Go down to Scratch Disks and change "Secondary" from none, to "Macintosh HD".
Now everything is running smoothl
...Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I am having the same question issue. I've spent all day on the phone with apple support and it doesn't seem to be a memory issue. I'm running high sierra 10.13.16 on a late 2013 iMac with 8 GB RAM.
Any updates on this Adobe!?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
https://forums.adobe.com/people/Gordon+Schuit schrieb
Any updates on this Adobe!?
95% of users on this forum are not Adobe staff.
If you want help, you will need to describe your file and what exactly is happening.
Also: does this happen after a computer restart with no other apps opened and a freshly created very simple file?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
You have described exactly what is happening with my Illustrator program - no other apps open and brand new file and it still comes up with 'not enough app program memory' and doesn't 'respond'.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Which version and system is it?
How much RAM?
Is this a file that you built from a standard document profile?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
HI! So I finally got in touch with adobe support - using the live chat! And they got me in touch with an illustrator expert. He took over my computer and found that none of my preferences were saving when changed.
First, he went in and had to basically re-install a part of my illustrator files because they had been corrupted. Then, he went to preferences--> Plug Ins and Scratch Disks--> Then under your Scratch Disks, change the secondary disk from "none" to Macintosh! Mine has been working every time.
You may not have corrupt files you may just have to change the Scratch Disk settings!
A
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
This did not work for me but I found the solution on another form, simply uninstall all Adobe applications, including beta applications, then re-install Illustrator.
My original issue was that I couldn't change the settings within Illustrator since the application would not open. After completing the steps above, I was able to go into Illustrators Settings > Plug-ins & Scratch Disks > Go down to Scratch Disks and change "Secondary" from none, to "Macintosh HD".
Now everything is running smoothly, I hope this helps.