Quizzes & Puzzles34 mins ago
Save instead of SaveAs
5 Answers
I was using Microsoft Office Picture Manager to crop a graphics file and use it somewhere else, and I clicked Save instead of Saving it under a new file name.
Is there any way of getting at the original file, even in a corrupted form? Some of it must be still on the hard drive, just no longer tagged as being part of the file.
Any suggestions very welcome.
Is there any way of getting at the original file, even in a corrupted form? Some of it must be still on the hard drive, just no longer tagged as being part of the file.
Any suggestions very welcome.
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I know you have learnt the hard way but NEVER work on the original of a digital file.
Either make a copy of the originals and put them in another folder and never touch them.
Or better still back digital images up to CD or DVD. Then copy them from CD or DVD to your hard disk and work on those.
Then whatever happens you always have them backed up on to CD or DVD.
Either make a copy of the originals and put them in another folder and never touch them.
Or better still back digital images up to CD or DVD. Then copy them from CD or DVD to your hard disk and work on those.
Then whatever happens you always have them backed up on to CD or DVD.
I didn't want to overcomplicate things in my original statement of the problem, but what I actually did was to crop the file and SaveAs a new file name (thereby keeping the original version). If I'd exited at that point, all would have been well as it would have prompted me that there were unsaved changes (in the original version) and I could have said "Don't Save". That's the way I'd been working happily enough on other files.
However, this time I decided to make a few more changes and when I saved those it did so under the original file name not the new one.
Another lesson learned the hard way!
However, this time I decided to make a few more changes and when I saved those it did so under the original file name not the new one.
Another lesson learned the hard way!
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