Good grief! Don't use 4 point type for ANYthing!! You waste your time and everybody else's. Maurice D. Howe 616 Lacey Drive Endwell, NY 13760 607-754-0469 [email protected]
_____ From: Rod Lockwood [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Monday, September 03, 2012 6:22 PM To: OpenOffice Users Mailing List Subject: OpenOffice unable to restore file or open it I have a text document that apparently did not close properly when closing OpenOffice. Starting OpenOffice 3.41 does not trigger the file restoration process. When I click on the file to open it, OpenOffice crashes because there is already a shadow file in existance. It begins the file restoration, but does not recover the shadow file. So I wind up not being able to do anything. Deleting the shadow file does not work. OpenOffice cannot open the document, even though it creates a new shadow document. This is why I never liked this system. I much prefer the system used by my text editor and the way it was done in the old days. Simply save the file to disc as a normal file with a .BAK extension every 15 minutes (or whatever your preference is). That way if the original file is corrupt, you simply delete the corrupt file, rename the backed up file and you are good to go. At the most you lose your allotted time of work. And saving the file manually obviously didn't make a difference. So forget about any lectures on how I should manually save my work periodically. It does not interfere with the undo process. It does not create multiple files, just the one back up file. A simple text editor is able to do this. I have never lost a file using this old-fashioned system of automatically backing up the file. Now I will have to recreate this file from scratch and from memory. -- Sincerely, Rod Lockwood _____ No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 2012.0.2197 / Virus Database: 2437/5245 - Release Date: 09/03/12
