ErikMagnusson
Technical User
Hello, friends. Can you give me some help?
I was using Indesign CS on a Mac G5 with OS 10.3.9 running. My document was called "abc.indd" (a much simplified name for the sake of illustration). I wanted to make a PDF of the document, to send it to a publisher, so I "exported" the file as a PDF, as I often do, and was going to save it to the desktop.
Normally Indesign asks me to name the new file, when exporting, and I type in a name, but this time I had happened to "copy" the file name from the original (since the real name was rather long, and had lots of understrokes, etc.), and I pasted that name into the dialog box, rather than typing it afresh. What I didn't realize is that I had copied as part of the name the file extension itself from the Indesign file. (i.e., instead of copying only the "abc" I had copied "abc.indd") Now I was saving my PDF file as "abc.indd;" it was still a working PDF, but I now had two files on the computer with the same name, in different locations.
I went to move the new, mislabeled PDF file to the folder where I had kept the Indesign file, and the computer asked if I wanted to replace the old file of the same name. Thinking it was just a back-up copy that I had made, I agreed, not paying attention to the full name and extension of the files in question. The computer effectively "overwrote" my original Indesign file with this new PDF file, because both of them were called "abc.indd" at this point. I thereby lost fifteen hours worth of work in the original (now overwritten) Indesign file.
I understand that some software can "undelete" files emptied from the trash can, but few, I suppose, support *.indd files. What is worse, this file was not really "deleted" at all, but actually "overwritten."
Of course, I will be sure to back up all my work a little better, from now on, but, in the meantime, what can I do to recover the file?
I was using Indesign CS on a Mac G5 with OS 10.3.9 running. My document was called "abc.indd" (a much simplified name for the sake of illustration). I wanted to make a PDF of the document, to send it to a publisher, so I "exported" the file as a PDF, as I often do, and was going to save it to the desktop.
Normally Indesign asks me to name the new file, when exporting, and I type in a name, but this time I had happened to "copy" the file name from the original (since the real name was rather long, and had lots of understrokes, etc.), and I pasted that name into the dialog box, rather than typing it afresh. What I didn't realize is that I had copied as part of the name the file extension itself from the Indesign file. (i.e., instead of copying only the "abc" I had copied "abc.indd") Now I was saving my PDF file as "abc.indd;" it was still a working PDF, but I now had two files on the computer with the same name, in different locations.
I went to move the new, mislabeled PDF file to the folder where I had kept the Indesign file, and the computer asked if I wanted to replace the old file of the same name. Thinking it was just a back-up copy that I had made, I agreed, not paying attention to the full name and extension of the files in question. The computer effectively "overwrote" my original Indesign file with this new PDF file, because both of them were called "abc.indd" at this point. I thereby lost fifteen hours worth of work in the original (now overwritten) Indesign file.
I understand that some software can "undelete" files emptied from the trash can, but few, I suppose, support *.indd files. What is worse, this file was not really "deleted" at all, but actually "overwritten."
Of course, I will be sure to back up all my work a little better, from now on, but, in the meantime, what can I do to recover the file?