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Caesar.: I have never used a recovery tool. Should you have it already installed in your PC "just in case" before you actually need to use it, and not after?
No need for that, as you will have to run it from another disk anyway.

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Caesar.: In other words, does installing the recovery tool potentially overwrites the files you want to recover?
Yes.

My advice when such issue arises is to make a full dump of the disk on another storage device (`dd` is great for that on Linux, or `ddrescue` for damaged disks), and run the recovery tool on the dump.
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wpegg: I'm a POWER USER! I always SHIFT+DELETE.

This has resulted in me deleting 100's of GB of data I didn't mean to. A similar downloads deletion experience to the OP being one of them.

I still do it though. Can't help myself. It's the curse of a power user.
+1
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vsr: Set read-only attribute to folder.
Also in GNU/Linux it is possible to apply an immutable attribute, which will make it impossible to edit, move, rename or delete files. I don't know if there is an equivalent for this in Windows.
Excellent advice. Unix is far superior to Windows for multitasking and file management. :)

Windows has only the Read-only attribute to protect files.

Curiously, I experience a write-lock error — almost every time — whenever, later, I try to rename a folder created through the browser for a game download. There is no possible reason for this lock, and eventually (usually) I can rename or whatever I want to do with the file. When I cannot, I create a new folder and copy the contents from the old and then try to delete the old (which only failed once, and even failed at the command line, but then didn't.) Windoze. >_<
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Themken: I deleted a manuscript once, not that long ago... :-(
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DubConqueror: Ouch, that's much more painful than losing a reply that I typed in but didn't get posted due to one of the many forum bugs of GOG (it got wrong when opening another thread before posting the reply I was typing).
I now regularly copy all the contents of a reply into a (plain) word processor (e.g., Notepad is fine for this, since it can be copied out again after a failure without clobbering the formatting). Too many replies lost to the aether …
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tinyE: There is no way I could accidentally erase my HD because to do that I'd need to get into the casing, and in order to get to the screws holding the casing on I'd need to move that giant electromagnet I have sitting there.
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paladin181: Please. Don't keep magnets near your hard disk. It makes it harder to erase.
That's actually a good way to remove carbon scoring. ;-)

edit: GoG merge & emoji edit
Post edited November 23, 2018 by scientiae
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Braggadar: I keep my backups on an external HDD, and secondary backups on DVD.
Fortunately my catalog is mainly games not receiving constant updates, so the DVD throw-out is small.

HDDs/SSDs are tempermental creatures. Long live physical media!
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kbnrylaec: Writable CD/DVD/BD are not very reliable.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disc_rot
Although I am fully aware of this phenomenon, I've had very little occurrence personally with disc rot.
Had it with one or two video DVDs out of the couple of hundred in my collection. Some older game CDs had physical reflective layer damage from poor handling in the late 90s, early 00s too.
But when you purchase decent media, and store in the proper environment, they are quite reliable for medium term.
I've had more burnouts with HDDs in the short term, compared to data loss from DVDs.

And as I said, the main backup is HDD. When it gets clunky, I copy over to a new one. The DVDs are secondary backup should the HDD fail without warning, and I fully intend in burning new ones eventually.
Can't accidentally delete files from a finalised data DVD by a simple keystroke, so they're good for me.
Yeah, shit happens. And that's why I plan to burn every game I've digitally purchased and played (here or elsewhere) on their own optical disks with updates, patches, cracks and whatnot.
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KingofGnG:
Buy archive class DVDs as they last much longer. Can be found in office supply shops.
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Lucumo: That has only to do with you not paying attention. I also delete the same way and it has not yet happened to me.
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wpegg: FTFY,

my arrogance destroys me.
FTFY,

please don't drag other people down to your level.
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wpegg: I'm a POWER USER! I always SHIFT+DELETE.

This has resulted in me deleting 100's of GB of data I didn't mean to. A similar downloads deletion experience to the OP being one of them.

I still do it though. Can't help myself. It's the curse of a power user.
I have the recycle bin deactivated on all my devices :D.
Every other time a misshap happens but i still keep it that way as well -.-
Is there an option or program on Windows 7 to add a "Are you sure you want to delete this, Yes or No?" prompt when you want to delete something, whether by accident or otherwise?
Post edited November 23, 2018 by Elmofongo
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Elmofongo: Is there an option or program on Windows 7 to add a "Are you sure you want to delete this, Yes or No?" prompt when you want to delete something, whether by accident or otherwise?
Right-click Recycle Bin -> Properties -> tick "Display delete confirmation dialog"
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Elmofongo: Is there an option or program on Windows 7 to add a "Are you sure you want to delete this, Yes or No?" prompt when you want to delete something, whether by accident or otherwise?
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AB2012: Right-click Recycle Bin -> Properties -> tick "Display delete confirmation dialog"
Oh yeah, I forgot that when you delete something it goes to the recycle bin first.
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Sam2014: I can relate.
I was trying to format a USB drive from exFAT to NTSF.
I accidently typed C: instead of D: -- formatted my main hard drive.

Luckily I back up to DVD and portable HD.
But the time lost to restoring my programs and files was lost
to a stupid mistake.
Then there is the "Do you want to refresh your Windows when upgrading" or the MBF gets fragged DUE to windows support, on the freaking phone. Not counting games and the reinstall of windows, it takes 12 hours to put all my programs back. That is if I don't have to redownload them.
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Sam2014: I can relate.
I was trying to format a USB drive from exFAT to NTSF.
I accidently typed C: instead of D: -- formatted my main hard drive.
Many years ago I did a similar thing. Popped a floppy in the drive, to make a backup. Brand new disk so I went to format it. Format C:, Enter. Oh, crap! And this was on a customer machine I was installing, so the machine software got wiped. Panic mode since we were pre-email at that time and getting a factory backup would be tricky. Was sweating bullets until I remembered that I made an initial backup a couple days earlier, and the machines always shipped with the MS-DOS installation floppies.

---

I once managed to wipe my entire ripped music library - around 400 CDs at the time - with the iPod software, when I chose the option to remove the entire library from the software. Apple interpreted it to mean "delete all my music files", while I read it as simply removing the file index from their software and leaving the actual files alone.
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Oddeus: Check these babies out: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-DISC
I use them since I learned about them.
Looks like it is time to upgrade my burner
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Sam2014: I can relate.
I was trying to format a USB drive from exFAT to NTSF.
I accidently typed C: instead of D: -- formatted my main hard drive.
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HereForTheBeer: Many years ago I did a similar thing. Popped a floppy in the drive, to make a backup. Brand new disk so I went to format it. Format C:, Enter. Oh, crap! And this was on a customer machine I was installing, so the machine software got wiped. Panic mode since we were pre-email at that time and getting a factory backup would be tricky. Was sweating bullets until I remembered that I made an initial backup a couple days earlier, and the machines always shipped with the MS-DOS installation floppies. …
I would wager that everyone who ever used a command line has done it — precisely once. :)
It's also possible to use recovery programs to recreate freshly deleted data. So permenently deleted isn't necessarily permenent.