05-11-2000 11:31 AM
05-11-2000 01:19 PM
05-11-2000 04:02 PM
05-11-2000 07:24 PM
06-11-2000 09:32 AM
06-12-2000 02:46 AM
06-12-2000 06:04 PM
05-08-2013 02:26 PM
Hi,
As you have stated, one should be very careful using the delete file function.
Unfortunately I haven't.
Funny thing is, I deleted about 250 files, about 50 MB but I can't find a trace of any of this data. Apparently it didn't go to the recycle bin, but recovery software like Recuvera couldn't find a trace of the files either. It did find a lot of other files, so I doubt they are gone because of the Windows 7 defragger.
Any suggestions what I can do to find/ recover the files?
05-08-2013 02:52 PM - edited 05-08-2013 02:54 PM
LabVIEW Delete function goes directly to the WinAPI File IO functions. There is no Recycle Bin on that API level. The Windows Recycle Bin is implemented in the Explorer Shell, and as such not part of the WinAPI. It would be possible to send files to the Recycle Bin, but since it is a Windows Explorer functionality that API is much more cumbersome, less stable and more Windows version dependant that the real WinAPI level.
The LabVIEW Delete function does nothing special other than calling the according Windows API function to delete the file. As such it should be really equivalent to the del command in the DOS shell and recovery programs should be able to recover some of the data. Not sure why you can't find the data files, unless you wrote some significant data after the delete.
12-01-2017 08:04 AM
I just wanted to add to this discussion. All the comments here were helpful and I took all of them into account and came up with the attached code.