F
FUBARinSFO
HI:
As probably everyone in the known Excel universe knows by now (except
for people like me who suspected this but didn't pay enough
attention), if you exit Excel normally without saving your work there
is no "recovery" file to be recovered, nor .bak file to activate. The
famous ~DF*.tmp files that so many web pages go to great lengths to
describe are released and erased when you exit Excel normally (there
is nothing in the Recycle Bin either, since it's not a user delete).
So all the wonderful internet posts about how to go about recovering
lost work in the event of a power outage fail to point out that if you
exit on purpose, all is indeed lost.
If there is some other answer to the above conclusion, I would indeed
like to hear about it, having just lost two hours work because for
some incomprehensible reason I haven't been saving my intermediate
results every 15 minutes.
-- <identity withheld, pending mental examination>
As probably everyone in the known Excel universe knows by now (except
for people like me who suspected this but didn't pay enough
attention), if you exit Excel normally without saving your work there
is no "recovery" file to be recovered, nor .bak file to activate. The
famous ~DF*.tmp files that so many web pages go to great lengths to
describe are released and erased when you exit Excel normally (there
is nothing in the Recycle Bin either, since it's not a user delete).
So all the wonderful internet posts about how to go about recovering
lost work in the event of a power outage fail to point out that if you
exit on purpose, all is indeed lost.
If there is some other answer to the above conclusion, I would indeed
like to hear about it, having just lost two hours work because for
some incomprehensible reason I haven't been saving my intermediate
results every 15 minutes.
-- <identity withheld, pending mental examination>