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Why does TextEdit keep loosing what I typed?

I just lost a whole hours worth of research. I was typing in text edit and then it started making me duplicate the file at every save and then I had to replace the orginal, and I did this several times until I finally decided to close it down (as it's done this before) and when I opened it up again a whole hours worth of research was missing. I clicked on the Restore button but it hadn't saved any of my research for over an hour.


Is there another way to get that restored?

Mac mini, Mac OS X (10.7.3)

Posted on Jun 15, 2012 9:18 AM

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6 replies

Jun 15, 2012 10:27 AM in response to Lorel

Repairing the permissions of a home folder in Lion is a complicated procedure. I don’t know of a simpler one that always works.


Back up all data now. Before proceeding, you must be sure you can restore your system to its present state


Launch the Terminal application in any of the following ways:


Enter the first few letters of its name into a Spotlight search. Select it in the results (it should be at the top.)


In the Finder, select Go Utilities from the menu bar, or press the key combination shift-command-U. The application is in the folder that opens.


Open LaunchPad. Click Utilities, then Terminal in the page that opens.


Drag or copy — do not type — the following line into the Terminal window, then press return:


chmod -R -N ~


The command will take a noticeable amount of time to run. When a new line ending in a dollar sign ($) appears below what you entered, it’s done. You may see a few error messages about an “invalid argument” while the command is running. You can ignore those. If you get an error message with the words “Permission denied,” enter this:


sudo !!


You'll be prompted for your login password, which won't be displayed when you type it. You may get a one-time warning not to screw up.


Next, boot into Recovery by holding down the key combination command-R at startup. Release the keys when you see a gray screen with a spinning dial.


When the Recovery screen appears, select Utilities ▹ Terminal from the menu bar.


In the Terminal window, enter “resetpassword” (without the quotes) and press return. A Reset Password window opens. You’re not going to reset the password.


Select your boot volume if not already selected.


Select your username from the menu labeled Select the user account if not already selected.


Under Reset Home Directory Permissions and ACLs, click the Reset button.


Select ▹ Restart from the menu bar.

Jun 16, 2012 1:33 PM in response to leroydouglas

I uploaded Tex-Edit Plus and so far that is working fine (I can set it to open without that annoying blank page and there is a large triangular space in lower lefe corner to click on when resizing the window instead of a one-pixel space -- two very annoying problems solved.


However I think you left out something in your instructions re setting another text editor as the default. What do I select? When I select Tex-Edit Plus and click Command=i it opens the info pane but doesn't look like the image you posted.

Why does TextEdit keep loosing what I typed?

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