How to manually recovery my word from asd file.

T

Timothy Tang

I read the post here, but i'm IQ -100, i don't understand how much you have
tried to me in your complicated nature. Can "Someone else other than
MICROSOfty's ppl" Answer this post?? That would be a 100millions thx.

Here is what had happened.

-power shortage during a single first editing word.docx documnet.
-System restart
-original file become blank (0kB) when opened no error message (but
obviously you are error stupid)
-addition of 2 files appeared/found:
1.)AutoRecovery save of "name".asd
2.)~$"ame".docx (hidden file)
-Windows operated 99% likeness of a regular desktop which placed at school.

What is wbk anyway?
Can anyone give me a clear step by step procedure?
If you can evening send me graph for a IQ -100 person, i'll be more willing
to put it up online (you tube/more common loacation) and contribute to
millions of thousand millions IQ-100 Word users.

Thank you
Timothy Tang
 
S

Suzanne S. Barnhill

You cannot manually recover an .asd file. If Word doesn't present the
AutoRecovery backup when you next start it, then you're probably out of
luck. A .wbk file is created the second time you save a document if you have
"Always create backup copy" enabled on the Save tab of Tools | Options. It
is a copy of the version before the current one.
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi Suzanne,

FWIW, if I right click on a Word .ASD file (.ASDs can also be Windows Streaming content) I can use Open With=>Microsoft Office Word
and open the ASD file in Word if it's not corrupted and not a zero byte file.

===============
You cannot manually recover an .asd file. If Word doesn't present the
AutoRecovery backup when you next start it, then you're probably out of
luck. A .wbk file is created the second time you save a document if you have
"Always create backup copy" enabled on the Save tab of Tools | Options. It
is a copy of the version before the current one.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill >>

--

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi Beth,

Word 2003 and 2007 :)

==========
Is this using Word 2007?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Beth Melton >>
--

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*
 

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