Can I restore a singe dbx file?
Caution: If the DBX is damaged (likely), dragging it out of the store folder
and then renaming/importing in this manner it is likely to yield no usable
data.
Tom might drag the DBX file to the desktop, make a Copy of it and then try
renaming/importing the copy. If no joy, run one of the recovery tools on
the other moved file. Any recovered message can then be dragged into an
open OE folder.
--
~PA Bear
Bruce Hagen wrote:
If it is only one folder, and by the size it appears to have mail in it,
try this first. You should rename the folder in the Folder Tree, and in
the Message store. If this does not work, then go get the tool.
In Windows Explorer, click on the file and drag it to the Desktop. Open OE
and create a folder with the *exact* same name as the one on your desktop.
***Copy a message from any folder to the new one. You MUST do this.***
Close OE. Go back to Windows Explorer and Click Desktop and drag the
folder from the Desktop to the OE store folder that you clicked on to
reveal the .dbx files. Prompt - "Do you want to overwrite......."? Click
Yes.
"TomYoung" wrote in message
oups.com...
PA Bear wrote:
Why it happens:
[big snip of lots of useful info]
--
~Robear Dyer (PA Bear)
MS MVP-Windows (IE/OE, Shell/User, Security), Aumha.org VSOP,
DTS-L.org
Thank you. After looking through all this I think I was guilty of the
sin of storing too much inside Outlook Express. Hopefully DBXtract
will save my bacon on the one dbx file I'd like to save.
TomYoung wrote:
Hi all:
A few days ago, for whatever reason, when I opened Outlook Express 6
the various folders I'd set up to sort incoming mail had
disappeared. My Sent Mail folder was empty and the Deleted Items
folder had nothing in it more recent than several weeks ago. My
message rules and address book were intact.
I tried all sorts of things to restore my folders without sucess and
finally just gave up. However, there's one folder - still sitting
in the message store folder - that I'd really like to have back. Is
there any way to do this?
TIA
Tom Young
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