From: Darryl on 4 Jan 2010 16:11 I was working on an Excel document, deleting all of the info in the cells, when I inadvertently hit "save" instead of "save as". Thus wiping out all my info I wanted to keep. Is there a way to recover the document with my original saved info?
From: rzink on 4 Jan 2010 16:34 Darryl, If you have the autosave feature turned on, then you can usually restore your original file from the autosaved file. But you have to do this before it is replaced the next time Excel autosaves your file again. This depends on your settings. I'm not sure if this will help you this time, but keep it in mind. If you are using Excel 2007, go to Excel Options > Save > AutoRecover File Location: to see where the file is being saved. Ryan "Darryl" wrote: > I was working on an Excel document, deleting all of the info in the cells, > when I inadvertently hit "save" instead of "save as". Thus wiping out all my > info I wanted to keep. Is there a way to recover the document with my > original saved info?
From: Gord Dibben on 4 Jan 2010 16:40 You have a backup copy? You sent the workbook to someone before working on it? No way to recover the "saved over" version. That is gone. Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Mon, 4 Jan 2010 13:11:01 -0800, Darryl <Darryl(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: >I was working on an Excel document, deleting all of the info in the cells, >when I inadvertently hit "save" instead of "save as". Thus wiping out all my >info I wanted to keep. Is there a way to recover the document with my >original saved info?
From: Gord Dibben on 4 Jan 2010 16:55 rzink Since XL2000 there has been no "Autosave" function or feature for Excel. Please read Excel help on "Autorecovery". Autorecovery simple creates a temporary backup copy of the workbook while you are working on it. If Excel does not crash and your workbook is closed/saved without incident, the temporary backup is deleted. DO NOT be lulled into thinking you are saving a backup copy at timed intervals. Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Mon, 4 Jan 2010 13:34:01 -0800, rzink <rzink(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: >Darryl, > >If you have the autosave feature turned on, then you can usually restore >your original file from the autosaved file. But you have to do this before >it is replaced the next time Excel autosaves your file again. This depends >on your settings. I'm not sure if this will help you this time, but keep it >in mind. If you are using Excel 2007, go to Excel Options > Save > >AutoRecover File Location: to see where the file is being saved. > >Ryan > >"Darryl" wrote: > >> I was working on an Excel document, deleting all of the info in the cells, >> when I inadvertently hit "save" instead of "save as". Thus wiping out all my >> info I wanted to keep. Is there a way to recover the document with my >> original saved info?
From: rzink on 4 Jan 2010 17:48 Gord Dibben, Thanks for the update. It's been a while since I had to use that feature or rather the removal of that feature. Darryl - if you are using XL 2007, and you either save or save-as, you can still "undo" changes that you have made. I'm not sure how many you can reverse, but it may be enough to get back your original document if you haven't closed it yet, but only in 2007. Have I got that right Gord? "Gord Dibben" wrote: > rzink > > Since XL2000 there has been no "Autosave" function or feature for Excel. > > Please read Excel help on "Autorecovery". > > Autorecovery simple creates a temporary backup copy of the workbook while > you are working on it. > > If Excel does not crash and your workbook is closed/saved without incident, > the temporary backup is deleted. > > DO NOT be lulled into thinking you are saving a backup copy at timed > intervals. > > > Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP > > On Mon, 4 Jan 2010 13:34:01 -0800, rzink <rzink(a)discussions.microsoft.com> > wrote: > > >Darryl, > > > >If you have the autosave feature turned on, then you can usually restore > >your original file from the autosaved file. But you have to do this before > >it is replaced the next time Excel autosaves your file again. This depends > >on your settings. I'm not sure if this will help you this time, but keep it > >in mind. If you are using Excel 2007, go to Excel Options > Save > > >AutoRecover File Location: to see where the file is being saved. > > > >Ryan > > > >"Darryl" wrote: > > > >> I was working on an Excel document, deleting all of the info in the cells, > >> when I inadvertently hit "save" instead of "save as". Thus wiping out all my > >> info I wanted to keep. Is there a way to recover the document with my > >> original saved info? > > . >
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