Body & Soul1 min ago
overwritten files - will they contain the new one?
2 Answers
please see my last post about a hard drive problem for back story.
i have managed to get Recuva to search the drive and theres lots there to recover
however, some of the files are marked as 'unrecoverable' - because they have been overwritten with another folder of something else -
so my question is
if i recover them anyway, will i get a copy of whatever overwrote the old file?
i realise it mean the orginal is gone - but will the new one work?
some of the unrecoverable folders, i dont want to save - but if they now contain a new folder with something i do - can i recover that?
if a folder marked. 'john.jpg' says its been overwritten with 'letter.doc' - will i get a letter or a corrupted picture?
thanks
i have managed to get Recuva to search the drive and theres lots there to recover
however, some of the files are marked as 'unrecoverable' - because they have been overwritten with another folder of something else -
so my question is
if i recover them anyway, will i get a copy of whatever overwrote the old file?
i realise it mean the orginal is gone - but will the new one work?
some of the unrecoverable folders, i dont want to save - but if they now contain a new folder with something i do - can i recover that?
if a folder marked. 'john.jpg' says its been overwritten with 'letter.doc' - will i get a letter or a corrupted picture?
thanks
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by joko. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.One file is never going to perfectly overwrite another, because files are made up of a number of blocks, and unless the system has just been defragged, or it's a brand new system, those blocks will not be contiguous. Therefore, the only way to find out what you'll get if you attempt recovery, is to do the recovery and have a look at the result. Generally speaking, if a recovery program decides that it may not be able to recover a file, it's right, so the chance are you'll get neithet the letter of the jpg, but just a load of junk.
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