Windows 10: deleted letter

Discus and support deleted letter in Windows 10 Software and Apps to solve the problem; is there anyway to recover a letter i was working on in notepad and accidentally deleted?... Discussion in 'Windows 10 Software and Apps' started by judsondavis, Aug 25, 2018.

  1. deleted letter


    is there anyway to recover a letter i was working on in notepad and accidentally deleted?

    :)
     
    judsondavis, Aug 25, 2018
    #1
  2. JediNemo Win User

    User Folder Relocation - drive letter changed / can't log in


    Not sure if this is the best thread to post this in.

    Here's the scenario.
    You use the (amazing) folder relocation tutorial in this forum. The process succeeds and you have a wonderful stress free year in Windows 10. Then your motherboard fails and you replace it with a different brand. Suddenly, when you get booted back to Windows, you can't log in! You quickly realize it's because you set your 2nd hard drive to drive letter "D:", but when Windows reloaded the disk drives because of the hardware change, it assigned "D:" to the DVD drive, and now you are stuck!

    Fear not fellow tweakers, I put in the research and have the solution (this may be redundant from another post, tried to search originally but didn't find anything, so my apologies if duplicating).

    Quick detail: First, we are going to boot into the recovery console and use the command prompt. In the recovery console, please be aware that it uses a virtual drive "X:" as the OS drive. Your other drive letters will be changed. Then we will identify which drive letter your OS is installed on. Next we will find which drive letter your user profiles are loaded on. Then we will make registry edits to fix the drive letter changes. Finally a reboot and celebratory dance.

    Note: You will need an understanding of command line operations and registry editing. If you do not, please find that information first, I will assume you have this knowledge moving forward.
    Also, there are no screen shots. I'm sorry, I didn't think I would be posting this while I went through the process, therefore I have no screen shots to share. If anyone has to go through this, it would be great if you could share your experience and provide screenshots if available.

    ***THIS INVOLVES REGISTRY EDITING. PROCEED AT YOUR OWN RISK. I AM NOT A REGISTRY EXPERT AND CAN NOT TROUBLESHOOT MISSED STEPS OR ERRORS.***

    Step 1: Boot into the Recovery Console and select the Command Prompt option.
    * If you don't know how, basic tutorial: Interrupt the boot cycle 3 times to activate the recovery consol. As the system boots, when you see the windows logo, simply do a hard reset. After 3 times, when the windows logo appears, it will say it is starting "Automatic Recovery". Once that is done, log in with the local admin account and it will (at least for me) automatically open a command prompt.
    * This can also be accomplished a number of other ways including the use of recovery drives, install media, etc.

    Step 2: If you are confident on which drive is likely which, you can skip to step 3. If not, you need to determine which drive is which in the registry. To do this you have to use a variety of steps.
    • Find the original OS drive. In the command prompt, type the following command:
      bcdedit | find "osdevice"
      The command will return osdecice partition=*: where "*" will be the current drive letter.
    • Now you need to find the drive that has the user profiles folder assigned, from your folder relocation. There are a few ways to do this, I will list one. Type "regedit" in the command prompt to open the registry editor.
    • In the registry editor, navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\MountedDevices
    • In this part of the registry you will see all the drive letters assigned to various volumes. From step 2a, you'll know which volume would be your normal "C:" drive. Write down the hex code associated with that drive letter. Next, you need to determine which drive letters represent volumes on physically mounted drives, and which represent removable media. Not getting too technical, basically you just look for all the volumes that have a hex code length equal to that of the OS drive.
      • For example, if in step 2a you discovered that your OS drive is assigned the letter "W:", then look at the entry with that drive letter assigned. The number of hex entries represents a volume on a physically connected drive. Find all the other drive letters that have an equal number of hex entries. Those are all volumes on physically connected drives.
    • Explore each of those drive letters to find the one with the user profile folder.
    • Do this by typing "dir *:" in the command prompt, where "*" equals the drive letter.
    • Go back to the registry editor (regedit). Find the "DosDrive" key entry with same drive letter as in step 2e. Write down the hex code for that key entry.


    Step 3: Before we can make the necessary registry changes, you need to connect to a different registry, called a "Hive".
    • This link has a more expanded explanation of what we are about to do.
    • In the key folder pane (left pane) of the Registry Editor window, highlight the "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE" option.
    • Next, click on "File" and chose the option for "Load Hive"
    • You'll have a familiar "open" window, navigate to the os drive found in step 2a.
    • Navigate to the windows\system32\config folder
    • Select the "SYSTEM" file option, and click "OPEN"
    • It will ask for a key name. This is a temporary name and thus doesn't need anything official. Make it easy to remember. I used: "Drive Letter Change". Then click "OK"
    • Now you will see an option under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE for "Drive Letter Change" (or whatever you named it in the previous step.
    • Open that new folder and navigate down to
      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Drive Letter Change\MountedDevices
    • This will look similar to what you found in step 2d, with the notable difference being this is what Windows will look like when not in recovery!


    Step 4: Make the registry changes
    • Delete every registry entry that either starts with \\??\ OR has a hex code LONGER than the physical drives (Step 2d).
    • You should be left with \DosDevices\ keys with equal length hex codes.
    • Find the key with the hex code that matches with the OS drive you wrote down in step 2d. Make sure it is assigned the drive letter "C:"
      • There should be no change in this
    • Find the key with a hex code that matches your user folder drive, you wrote this down in step 2f.
    • Right click that key name and chose the option for "Rename"
    • Change the drive letter to whichever drive letter is needed for your particular setup.
      • When I did my folder relocation initially, I had set my user folders to be found on the D drive. So on this step I renamed the key from "\DosDevice\E:" to "\DosDevice\D:"
    • Confirm there are no duplicate or conflicting key entries: each drive letter will be used only once.
    • *NOTE* For THIS particular set of keys (MountedDevices), you can safely delete everything thing. Windows will re-initialize these values at boot if it detects drives that are unaccounted for. So, if you delete everything besides the C drive and your user profile drive, that is OK! Windows will reconstruct the missing keys for you. Once you can log in, you can use Device Manager to change drive letters at will. This IS NOT TRUE for all registry items.

    Step 5: Close the registry editor

    Step 6: Type "exit" at the command prompt

    Step 7: Click on the button for "Turn off PC"

    Step 8: Count to 10, take a deep breath, and turn the computer back on

    Step 9: Log into windows

    Step 10: Assuming Step 9 worked, celebrate in your preferred method. If step 9 didn't work, double check you followed my instructions. If not, shut it all down and go to the beach!
     
    JediNemo, Aug 25, 2018
    #2
  3. topgundcp Win User
    Unable to delete a folder - Invalid folder name


    Suggestion:
    • Run chkdsk x: /r to make sure that there's no HD corruption.
      x: is the drive containing the folder you want to delete.
    • Try to delete the folder again. If still does not work, go to step 3.
    • Download: Download - Linux Mint and create a bootable USB using: Rufus - Create bootable USB
    • Boot up with Linux Mint and try to delete the folder again.
      NOTE: Unlike WinPE. Linux does not have any Windows permission imposed to it so it is easier to delete.
     
    topgundcp, Aug 25, 2018
    #3
  4. bestellen Win User

    deleted letter

    Deleting contacts from Windows 10


    When you say Windows Mail Live are you referring to Mail app or Windows Live Mail?

    I suggest you to try the steps provided below and check if it helps.


    • Open Windows Live Mail.
    • Press Ctrl + 3 using your keyboard. Right-click on the contact to delete it if it is a single contact.
    • Highlight all contacts by pressing Ctrl + A.
    • Click Delete located on the Ribbon bar.
    • Click OK when you see the message These contacts will also be deleted from Hotmail, Messenger, and other Windows Live services.

    After following the steps above, all your contacts that you have manually added to your account will be deleted however, contacts coming from third-party sites such as Facebook will not be deleted unless you remove Facebook from your account.

    For Mail app:

    Open People app then delete the contact.

    Hope this helps in resolving the issue. If the issue persists, do get back to us. We will be happy to assist you.
     
    bestellen, Aug 25, 2018
    #4
Thema:

deleted letter

Loading...
  1. deleted letter - Similar Threads - deleted letter

  2. How to stop letters from being deleted when searching in file explorer

    in Windows 10 Gaming
    How to stop letters from being deleted when searching in file explorer: When searching for files in teh file explorer, we will type letters, then it will jump back deleting some of what has been typed. This usually happens when pressing the space bar and is an issue on multiple computers to different people, which are all running on Windows 11....
  3. How to stop letters from being deleted when searching in file explorer

    in Windows 10 Software and Apps
    How to stop letters from being deleted when searching in file explorer: When searching for files in teh file explorer, we will type letters, then it will jump back deleting some of what has been typed. This usually happens when pressing the space bar and is an issue on multiple computers to different people, which are all running on Windows 11....
  4. File Explorer is showing 2 different drive letters for the same Hard Drive. How do I delete...

    in Windows 10 Gaming
    File Explorer is showing 2 different drive letters for the same Hard Drive. How do I delete...: As the question states, one of my Hard Disk drives now has two drive letters.The original is Local drive E:, and the copy is Local drive L:The L: drive does not show in Disk Management.If I delete a file from L:, it is also deleted from E:The two drive letters clearly refer...
  5. File Explorer is showing 2 different drive letters for the same Hard Drive. How do I delete...

    in Windows 10 Software and Apps
    File Explorer is showing 2 different drive letters for the same Hard Drive. How do I delete...: As the question states, one of my Hard Disk drives now has two drive letters.The original is Local drive E:, and the copy is Local drive L:The L: drive does not show in Disk Management.If I delete a file from L:, it is also deleted from E:The two drive letters clearly refer...
  6. File Explorer is showing 2 different drive letters for the same Hard Drive. How do I delete...

    in Windows 10 Network and Sharing
    File Explorer is showing 2 different drive letters for the same Hard Drive. How do I delete...: As the question states, one of my Hard Disk drives now has two drive letters.The original is Local drive E:, and the copy is Local drive L:The L: drive does not show in Disk Management.If I delete a file from L:, it is also deleted from E:The two drive letters clearly refer...
  7. Why does my keyboard type a single letter/number or even the back space only deleting a...

    in Windows 10 Gaming
    Why does my keyboard type a single letter/number or even the back space only deleting a...: I only really noticed this during a game I play called Warthunder. When I clicked a or d to bank the plane left or right, it would only do it for a millisecond and then stop. I thought it was weird as it just started doing it today. I then tested it on typing into google and...
  8. Why does my keyboard type a single letter/number or even the back space only deleting a...

    in Windows 10 Software and Apps
    Why does my keyboard type a single letter/number or even the back space only deleting a...: I only really noticed this during a game I play called Warthunder. When I clicked a or d to bank the plane left or right, it would only do it for a millisecond and then stop. I thought it was weird as it just started doing it today. I then tested it on typing into google and...
  9. how to delete unknown drive letter brought by usb drive?

    in Windows 10 Gaming
    how to delete unknown drive letter brought by usb drive?: OS: win10whenever I plug my usb drive in to my laptop, there will be 2 drive letters assigned to it. one of them of course is wrong. And the dialog asking to format E: also appears, twice, which is very annoying.The USB drive is gpt formatted, and has 3 partitions on it:...
  10. how to delete unknown drive letter brought by usb drive?

    in Windows 10 Software and Apps
    how to delete unknown drive letter brought by usb drive?: OS: win10whenever I plug my usb drive in to my laptop, there will be 2 drive letters assigned to it. one of them of course is wrong. And the dialog asking to format E: also appears, twice, which is very annoying.The USB drive is gpt formatted, and has 3 partitions on it:...

Users found this page by searching for:

  1. find deleted letter