F5F Stay Refreshed Software General Software What steps should I take to remove all the damaged files at once after restoring my files?

What steps should I take to remove all the damaged files at once after restoring my files?

What steps should I take to remove all the damaged files at once after restoring my files?

R
Ryugoo
Member
93
03-29-2023, 11:17 PM
#1
Once you've restored your files, how can I remove all the corrupted ones at once? There are many damaged files and I can't go through each one. Help Me!
R
Ryugoo
03-29-2023, 11:17 PM #1

Once you've restored your files, how can I remove all the corrupted ones at once? There are many damaged files and I can't go through each one. Help Me!

P
Perndah
Junior Member
17
03-29-2023, 11:24 PM
#2
Store your recovered items elsewhere on another storage device.
Clear this section completely.
Update the format.
(understood this isn't the operating system drive)
P
Perndah
03-29-2023, 11:24 PM #2

Store your recovered items elsewhere on another storage device.
Clear this section completely.
Update the format.
(understood this isn't the operating system drive)

K
Kaisetsu
Senior Member
651
03-30-2023, 02:15 AM
#3
I don't believe my question was understood clearly. I have restored all the files, but many are corrupted and I need to check each one individually to find out which still work. Do you have any software that could eliminate all the damaged files and keep only the functional ones?
K
Kaisetsu
03-30-2023, 02:15 AM #3

I don't believe my question was understood clearly. I have restored all the files, but many are corrupted and I need to check each one individually to find out which still work. Do you have any software that could eliminate all the damaged files and keep only the functional ones?

O
Oci_Goofy
Junior Member
11
03-30-2023, 08:39 AM
#4
Ah.
I don't think it exists.
Even more troubling is that some might be "damaged" yet remain accessible.
For example, half of a JPG file.
O
Oci_Goofy
03-30-2023, 08:39 AM #4

Ah.
I don't think it exists.
Even more troubling is that some might be "damaged" yet remain accessible.
For example, half of a JPG file.

L
Le_Conteur
Junior Member
49
03-30-2023, 12:01 PM
#5
ok Thanks anyways
L
Le_Conteur
03-30-2023, 12:01 PM #5

ok Thanks anyways