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#1
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I accidently clicked "no" when a Word document asked me if I wanted to save.
Is there any way I can get back the information I was working on? Please help me a soon as possible |
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#2
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Probably not. The document is stored in the computer's RAM until it is
saved. If you say no when asked to save the RAM is cleared out. Now, if you were working on a document that you had previously saved, the original document would still be in place. Lessen learned. Save often when creating new work, at least once every ten minutes. I worked for a company quite a few years ago that had a team of 25 CAD operators/designers. I can't begin to tell you how often a person would lose 5-6 hours of design work, because they didn't save regularly. The department finally put in a bell that dinged loudly every ten minutes. Anybody who lost work more that ten minutes old was severely reprimanded - maybe dismissed if they were a repeat offender. -- Regards, Richard Urban Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User Quote from George Ankner: If you knew as much as you think you know, You would realize that you don't know what you thought you knew! "tnev" <tnev@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:46F24FB6-3A60-4BB0-A57C-6ED49983D32F@microsoft.com... >I accidently clicked "no" when a Word document asked me if I wanted to >save. > Is there any way I can get back the information I was working on? Please > help me a soon as possible |
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#3
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"tnev" <tnev@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
>I accidently clicked "no" when a Word document asked me if I wanted to save. >Is there any way I can get back the information I was working on? Please >help me a soon as possible IMHO, no. If you didn't save the data, then there's nothing to be recovered. -- Tim Slattery MS MVP(DTS) Slattery_T@bls.gov |
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#4
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I wish I had read this thread before I answered the same person who posted
the same question a second time somewhat later. I have no idea why he expected to find someone giving him a different answer. It interests me however that you, as I, quoted an experience where professionals forgot the golden rule of saving often. "Richard Urban" wrote: > Probably not. The document is stored in the computer's RAM until it is > saved. If you say no when asked to save the RAM is cleared out. Now, if you > were working on a document that you had previously saved, the original > document would still be in place. > > Lessen learned. Save often when creating new work, at least once every ten > minutes. > > I worked for a company quite a few years ago that had a team of 25 CAD > operators/designers. I can't begin to tell you how often a person would lose > 5-6 hours of design work, because they didn't save regularly. The department > finally put in a bell that dinged loudly every ten minutes. Anybody who lost > work more that ten minutes old was severely reprimanded - maybe dismissed if > they were a repeat offender. > > -- > > > Regards, > > Richard Urban > Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User > > Quote from George Ankner: > If you knew as much as you think you know, > You would realize that you don't know what you thought you knew! > > "tnev" <tnev@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:46F24FB6-3A60-4BB0-A57C-6ED49983D32F@microsoft.com... > >I accidently clicked "no" when a Word document asked me if I wanted to > >save. > > Is there any way I can get back the information I was working on? Please > > help me a soon as possible > > > |
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