)īottom Line: Copy the file to a safe location. Each document compromises one numbered item under this plist key.Īs you can see, unfortunately the values for these keys are binary encoded, not plain text, so you need to paste the Value strings into a Hex editor to see the file names and paths. The example above is for Word, which corresponds to the MSWD code. The list of recent items for each application is stored in the key File MRU. If you open it up it will look something like this: This file is in standard plist format, and can be viewed using the plist viewer built into Xcode. what i am suggesting is that you alter your advice in this case so it doesn't end catastrophically for someone else.The recent documents for all Microsoft office products are stored in a preferences file (plist) in each users's library: maybe this is something peculiar to my OS or my install or maybe it is due to Preference settings of some other issue i have no idea.īut again, this isn't really about the fact that i followed the advice and it created a tremendous problem almost trashing my install. in fact, i've never found Finder to get me a search in this manner of the folder i am actually in so i have never really used it from Finder. I just ran your suggestion /again/ on a folder on my desktop and two folder in my documents folder and in all three cases Finder defaulted to searching THIS MAC. what's wrong with my telling you to STRONGLY SUGGEST to someone that they verify their backup before they run this when you suggest it? what is wrong with your STRONGLY SUGGESTING they verify that they MAKE SURE the folder they are searching shows up in the top left of the Finder window when they attempt this for the first time? why not recommend running an Undo immediately after trying this if it runs for a very long time or appears like it didn't perform as needed?Īlso - if your advice doesn't work on the other end i would think that you would want to try to figure out and/or want to get to the bottom of why it wasn't working instead of just blaming user error or assigning responsibility for my backups or simply saying your advice "was good". Then you blithely suggest that i should restore from the backup that i ran prior to attempting this. the logical consequence of not catching this is to catastrophically move files - with potentially no option to UNDO - or tellingly at least no advice to make sure to run an Undo if it screws up for some reason.įor instance, my Finder Find interface right now shows This Mac, All My Files, and Shared. Where to start? stop and think about this for a minute.įirst off, you gave me advice to use finder to move all files from a folder - whereas the other poster suggested i use terminal commands - and the very real result of this suggestion for /anyone/ including expert users is to not catch and/or not see and/or not understand what is being searched in what by any stretch of the imagination is a visually un-intuitive Finder interface for the Search Function. I just went back to look to check the folder that i moved everything to just in case and i am actually thinking that i have made a big mistake while time machine is off. or god forbid all my documents from THIS MAC or something? i mean, there does not appear to be any way to determine that i am actually searching this one folder that i opened that is on my desktop /except/ by assuming that it was the window that was in fact open when i ran CMD + F.Īm i missing something here or do you know what i mean? i mean, if i happened to accidentally click on another open finder window before running CMD + F there would be no way for me to know that i was about to move a bajillion files from the wrong folder. There is something really sort of confusing about this (i am on ML at the moment) in that the FINDER window that gets opened up just says "searching This Mac" at the top and then it shows "Search: This Mac | All My Files" in the top just under the title of the window. Oh gosh, i think i just made a big mistake here.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |