While working on Microsoft
word, There are times when you become so engrossed in your work that you forget
that you never saved your document.
And in a rush to get to that next task, you
close the file without saving it. It may also happen that your laptop crashed or there was power breakdown before you had a chance to save the file you were working on.
Whatever be the
reason for your failure to save your document may be, Microsoft offers some
hope for recovery.
By default, Office applications automatically save backup copies of your documents every 10
minutes as you work and although this is just temporary, you have a good chance
of recovering them the sooner you discover your mistake. Here’s how
to recover an unsaved document.
How to
Recover an Unsaved Document
This tutorial was performed in a Word 2016 document,
but the steps should be more or less identical in previous versions of Office
as well.
1. Open the Office application that you were working on when your file did
not get saved. If it was a Word document that did not get saved, open Word.
2. Select the File tab and click Info.
3. On the Info page, click Manage Document and from the
drop-down menu, choose Recover Unsaved Documents.
NOTE: Alternately, you can select the File tab and in the Open tab
(on the left pane) in the Recent section, you can scroll down the right pane
and select Recover Unsaved Documents.
4. The Open dialog box will open up.
This will take you to the UnsavedFiles folder where all your unsaved files are
temporarily backed up. Select the file you need and then click Open.
5. You can
now save your file in a location of your choice.
How to Change the Way Office
Automatically Save Files
Office applications are highly customizable and this works
even when it comes to changing the way it automatically saves temporary files.
You can decide where you want your files saved, how often they should be saved,
and whether to save a temporary file if you close a document without
saving. Here’s where you can set or customize those options.
1. Open Word and select the File tab.
2. On the File menu, click Options to open up
the Word Options dialog box.
3. In the dialog box, select the Save tab.
4. In the right pane, in the Save documents section, select the options as per yourrequirement.
You can
change the AutoSaving time to less than 10 minutes if that seems like a long
time to you. Two minutes is something that I prefer to set it at, but you can
choose a timing from every one minute to every 120 minutes.
The other 2 options are better off at their default settings
as you always want to keep the last autosaved version if you close without
saving and the file saving location is easier to access at
its default setting than at one you may choose on your own.
That’s it! The Office recovery feature will not save you from every
kind of situation you may face with regards to losing your data, but it can
definitely come in handy when you accidentally close a document without saving
it.
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