Name
Recycle Bin
Synopsis
In the early days of computing, once you deleted a file, it was gone. An unerase tool (available as part of Norton Utilities) was commonly used to recover accidentally deleted files, and can even be used in Windows XP to recover items emptied from the Recycle Bin. Thus, the Recycle Bin was implemented — a feature that gives nearly every file a second chance, so to speak.
Drag any item from the Desktop to the Recycle Bin icon to delete it,
as shown in Figure 3-23.
File
→ Delete on the menubar of a folder also moves items
to the Recycle Bin, as does selecting the item and then pressing the
Delete key. By default, files are not deleted
immediately, but are stored until the Recycle Bin runs out of space,
at which point they are deleted, oldest first, to make space. Until
that time, they can be retrieved by double-clicking on the Recycle
Bin icon, browsing through the contents of the Recycle Bin window,
and dragging or sending the file elsewhere.
Figure 3-23. Drag nearly any icon onto your Recycle Bin to delete it; subsequently open the Recycle Bin folder to retrieve it
Use the Delete key to move any selected files to the
Recycle Bin. To access the Recycle Bin with the keyboard,
it’s easiest to simply openWindows Explorer and navigate to your
\Recycled folder (there’s one
on each drive, if you have more than one).
Warning
Files dragged to the Recycle Bin (or that ...
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