> > > Please help me! > > I really hope so, I have an exam on Tuesday and I lost about 400 flash > > cards for that course and I'd really like to get back to making them as > > soon as possible. > > It did exist, that's the weird thing. I had it saved on my portable hard > drive and it was plugged in and unlocked. I uninstalled mnemosyne and deleted > anything related to it as well and it still asks for it, I don't know why > it's still trying to find it. I don't know why it couldn't find it in the > first place either.
Not to be cheeky, Smartiec, but do you know how to find odd files like Genie.db wherever it is cunningly hidden, on whichever drive ? EasyFind is called that because it can find the most difficult file... George On 25 Nov 2012, at 12:14, Gnome wrote: > If you find a copy of your original database somewhere you can usually open > it via File>Open. Is your other data on the portable drive there? Sometimes > flashdrives change drive letters, for example G: becomes F: > > If not, it seems like it has been deleted somehow and I'm sorry for your loss. > > Have you tried creating a new database for stopping the error from occurring? > Do you use mnemosyne 2? > > > kl. 20:47:45 UTC+1 søndag 25. november 2012 skrev [email protected] følgende: > On Sunday, November 25, 2012 1:35:09 PM UTC-5, Gnome wrote: > > Its seems like mnemosyne can't find your database.Make sure > > "g:/university/2nd year/flashcards.db_media" exists. > > > I tried uninstalling it and reinstalling it and I even deleted my flash > > > cards and then reinstall it again. The message above is the one that > > > appears. > -- -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "mnemosyne-proj-users" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.
