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Posted

My wife was working on a document in Word one night, didn't save it, left Word open overnight, when she went to work on it the next morning, her computer had rebooted overnight. Figure some automatic update did it. Where might there be, if at all, a tmp file of that document?

Posted

No clue on the .tmp. It didn't auto-save a draft, or give you a restore option when you re-opened Word? (Apparently not, or you wouldn't be asking ...)

Posted

Wow - I hate it when stuff like that happens.

 

Word actually saves files automatically most of the times and they're not always .tmp files - sometimes they start with a ~, sometimes they may be a .wbk file - it depends on your version of Word and the OS you're running.

 

Microsoft has a good support topic that gives advice on things to try:

 

 

Try this...

Posted

Word, XL, and PPT are usually pretty good about auto-saving files.

 

What version of Word? 12 tends to be better at this than 11 (2003) or 10 (XP). Did you search through hidden files/folders and also search for files that include the ~ in the name? Temporary objects created by Office (from tables in Access to temporary bits in Word) are saved with tildes. The auto-recover location is by default at C:\Users\[userName]\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Word\ on Vista (this is a hidden folder). You should be able to check the location in Word Options.

 

Is this a work machine or one joined to a domain? It's possible that there's group policy set on the machine preventing the creation of backup files, though that's kind of doubtful.

Posted

You changed the folder options to "view hidden files and folders," right? My experience is that the tempory files are saved in the same directory as the main file, but are always hidden.

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