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Recycle Bin / File Recovery

In this lesson, you will learn:

So you accidently deleted a file and you now you want it back. Fortunately, Windows Recycle Bin protects you - to a point.

Note: To begin this lesson, Copy your Text 1.txt into your personal folder in My Documents\Students, and then right click it and DELETE IT.

Recycle Bin

Open Recycle Bin through Windows Explorer. Open up the left pane (Click on the 'Folders' button) and you will find it at the bottom of the left pane. Click on View > Details.


Choosing 'View' from the menu allows you to change the way files are displayed or to re-arrange the order of the files. Click a few of the options to see the changes, then click on 'Veiw > Details when you are ready to continue. Your screen should look something like the one below:

The Recycle Bin window has a menu bar with many of the familiar options. In 'Details' view, you can also click the buttons above each column, as in other windows, and sort the list by size, type, date deleted etc. If part of the list is obscured because the column is not wide enough, maximize the window and point to the left or right side of the column button and then double click or drag when the pointer changes to a double-headed arrow.

The columns can be turned on or off to suit your preferences.

When Recycle Bin is opened, there are options of either permanently deleting the files or restoring the files to their original locations. The location that it will be restored to is shown in the 'Original Location'.

File Recovery: Where'd it go?

Double Click the Recycle Bin to open it and view its contents. You may find that it needs to be made larger to hold all the files. To recover a file, simply click it and select File > Restore, or right click it and select 'Restore'. The file is restored to its original location. To move the file to another location simply drag and drop it where you need it.

The Windows Operating System holds files in a special folder called Recycle Bin until a disk clean-up utility runs and cleans out the files, or until you restore them or delete them permanently. The Recycle Bin is a large Queue with the recently deleted files listed at the top. The oldest files in the Queue are automatically deleted when the queue becomes full. As long as the Recycle Bin is big enough (and you can change this), there is a good chance that you can recover even your oldest files days or weeks after they've been deleted. BUT, be careful when you delete files and folders, because some deletions will occur without sending them to the Recycle Bin. This will be covered in the Deleting Files class.

Instead of using Menu options, you can use drag and drop techniques. You can delete files by dragging them into the Recycle Bin, and you can recover by dragging them back out. However, the original folder for the deleted files won't be restored if you drag and drop files into other folders to restore them. Windows assumes you want to put the files into the folder you're dropping them into.

The Recycle Bin has a limited amount of disk space to use for your deleted items, so if you delete a large folder that has a lot of files, and it will not fit into the Queue, the files will be deleted permanently. If you use up the available space, you will not be able to recover some files unless the proper settings are made

Recovering a File or Folder

When you delete a folder, its entire contents, including sub-folders go to the Recycle Bin. But you do not see the folders and sub-folders themselves in the Queue window - just the folder and file names. The folders' names are still connected with the files in the Recycle Bin: you can see them listed in "Original Location" next to each file that was deleted. The "Original Location" becomes the location that it will be restored TO. If you restore a file by selecting File> Restore (not by dragging it out into a new folder), the file will return to its original Folder, as identified under Original Location. If the file and its folder were deleted together, the folder will be restored ALONG WITH the file.

This lesson shows where and demonstrates how Windows settings can be changed. This information is for use on your home and business computers.

The Lab Computers will not allow changes to be made that affect the operating system. This information is for instructional purposes only.

Cleaning Out the Recycle Bin

To clear out the Recycle Bin, choose File > Empty Recycle Bin. You can also delete individual files by selecting them and choosing File > Delete. This permanently deletes the files without any chance of recovery. Unless someone is using a special recovery utility designed specifically for the purpose, the only way to recover files or folders is by restoring them from a back up disk.

Making the Recycle Bin Larger or Smaller

To change the amount of disk space set aside for the Recycle Bin for deleted objects, close the window and right click on Recycle Bin on the right pane of Windows Explorer and then choose 'Properties'.

WIndow can be set up so that each drive requires space for deleted files. You can customize individual drives by clicking the tab for that drive. You can configure default settings for all drives using the Global (General) Tab. Using the slider, space can be allocated in % of the total drive space. Increasing this REDUCES the amount of free space left on the disk. In the event of "Disk Full" errors on copying files THIS IS THE FIRST PLACE to look.

Recycle Bin Properties

As a general rule, you as a home PC user would never need to change these settings. A technician would have to change them for certain situations, and if there was trouble, this is the first place they would look, in case YOU changed something here.

Global Tab: On this tab you can adjust the amount of disk space to hold deleted files. Thedefault disk space is ten percent of the disk drive's total size. You can decrease this value if you are running out of disk space, or increase it if you have a lot of disk space and want to make sure you can recover more files.

'Do not move files to the Recycle Bin'. Choosing this means you won't be able to recover files with Recycle Bin, but will be permanently deleted every time!

'Display delete confirmation dialog'. Check this box to receive the warning. This is always checked by default, but warnings can be removed for automatic file operations that will stop if warnings are turned on. If there are no automatic processing handling your files for you, it is best to always have this turned on.

Drive Tabs: The Global tab also has a option to use one setting for all drives. The settings you make on the Global Tab determine the settings for all drives unless you click 'Configure drives independently'. To configure individual drives click the tab for that drive. Use this with caution. The Individual drive setting 'locks' the drive space on each of the drives and makes it unusable for anything else. Separate permissions can be designated for each drive, making automated maintenance and disk cleanup utilities fail.

Reminder: If you delete files from a USB Drive or a floppy disk or the desktop, they will not appear in the Recycle Bin.

Windows will ask you to verify the deletion only once and the deletion will be final. If the folder or file is too big to fit in the Recycle Bin, it will be deleted permanently. You may or may not be notified first, depending on some other conditions, like attributes and size etc.



Email me: arcon4@frontier.com