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Forum Discussion
David S.118
8 months agoHelpful | Level 5
I thought I was deleting local files but deleted files from my Dropbox account
I have a laptop that I don't use often that's connected to my Dropbox account. I turned it on and was doing some stuff and needed to free up some space. So I went in with a disk scanner and found som...
David S.118
8 months agoHelpful | Level 5
Looks like Events might work, but it's in chunks of files. Thanks. They really need folder-based operations when you're working with tons of files. With 65k, files, I'm not going through them one-by-one. It's like cutting off a branch of a tree: I'm not interested in the leaves, just the whole thing.
For Selective Sync or Online Only, will they delete the files that are there on the local drive? I don't need them locally, but I want them on Dropbox.
Rich
Super User II
8 months agoDavid S.118 wrote:They really need folder-based operations when you're working with tons of files.
The closest option would be to just navigate your folders as you always do on Dropbox.com, and enable the display of Deleted Files within the folders.
David S.118 wrote:For Selective Sync or Online Only, will they delete the files that are there on the local drive?
Selective Sync will completely remove a folder when it's unchecked in Preferences. When a file or folder is marked as Online-only, a "marker" is left behind on the drive. You can still see the file or folder but it doesn't take up space on the drive. If you (or any process on your computer) accesses a file that's marked as online-only, Dropbox will download it back to the computer and mark it as Available.
- David S.1188 months agoHelpful | Level 5
Thanks for the help. I still think it's a little weird because I deleted a few FOLDERS and they want me to restore FILES (and buckets of files).
It's like saying you threw some bread in the trash and you want to pull it out and you get back all of the ingredients that were in the bread: flour, salt, yeast, etc. -- it got deconstructed. I don't know what the "ingredients" were, I just want the folders restored with whatever was in them.
I realize that Dropbox doesn't technically know what the folders were that I asked to delete, but it can reconstruct them easily enough by building a file tree diagram using the folder names. That would be great because it would let me see the entire file tree, not just a long list of files with dozens of them having the same names -- but in different folders.
If it displayed the current folder tree in Dropbox, with this one to the side, it would be really easy to select what to restore just by checking a box on the folders I want; or I could drill-down to subfolders and restore them.
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