+Nakedbamboo Posted November 30, 2007 Share Posted November 30, 2007 I just noticed that my stats say that I have 403 finds on 402 unique caches. I must have accidently double logged one. How can I find out which one is double logged? Link to comment
+MrFRjr Posted November 30, 2007 Share Posted November 30, 2007 Go back through ALL your finds and be glad you don't have 4003 finds [] ; --) Link to comment
+trainlove Posted November 30, 2007 Share Posted November 30, 2007 Request 'Your Finds PQ', download it to itsnotaboutthenumbers.com or is it itsallaboutthenumbers.com. That wil tell you which caches are unique and which are duplicated. Link to comment
+tozainamboku Posted November 30, 2007 Share Posted November 30, 2007 I just noticed that my stats say that I have 403 finds on 402 unique caches. I must have accidently double logged one. How can I find out which one is double logged? Where did you notice this? If it was on ItsNotAboutTheNumbers.com, you can click on the link (list multiple finds) to see the cache you logged twice. Link to comment
+Stunod Posted November 30, 2007 Share Posted November 30, 2007 (edited) Your GC and INATN profile now show 402, so you must have found it. Edited November 30, 2007 by Stunod Link to comment
+Nakedbamboo Posted December 1, 2007 Author Share Posted December 1, 2007 There must have been something wrong in my GSAK database. I deleted the database and redid the finds and it was correct. Oh well. Thanks. Link to comment
+Team Cotati Posted December 1, 2007 Share Posted December 1, 2007 There must have been something wrong in my GSAK database. I deleted the database and redid the finds and it was correct. Oh well. Thanks. Guess that that means that you didn't find it. Link to comment
+sTeamTraen Posted December 1, 2007 Share Posted December 1, 2007 There must have been something wrong in my GSAK database. I deleted the database and redid the finds and it was correct. Oh well. Thanks. The most common cause of this in GSAK is if you have at some point deleted a Found log after GSAK has captured it. For example, you find a cache on Tuesday, log it on Wednesday, download your My Finds PQ results on Thursday and add them to GSAK. Then on Friday you notice a big typo or something in your Found log, so to avoid that "this log has been edited" stuff, you delete the log and write a new one. When you next put the cache into GSAK, it will add the new log but not delete the old one. You can tell GSAK (on the "Filter" dialog, "Logs" tab) to show you caches which have more than one log by a certain person (eg, you). Link to comment
+ClydeE Posted December 2, 2007 Share Posted December 2, 2007 (edited) The easiest way to track these caches down in GSAK is to go to "Search=>Filter", click on the "Other" tab and set this filter: Edited December 2, 2007 by ClydeE Link to comment
+AndrewRJ Posted December 3, 2007 Share Posted December 3, 2007 The easiest way to track these caches down in GSAK is to go to "Search=>Filter", click on the "Other" tab and set this filter: That is stellar Clyde. I never knew that existed. Now I am off to track down that pesky mistake somewhere. Link to comment
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