Session Directory?

• Jul 10, 2017 - 00:09

I have a shared computer which I arrange songs on. I worked for a few hours, then used CTRL+S to save. The person who I share the computer with shut the computer down, but when I went back to open my score, it opened but there were no notes, just the title and empty staffs. I looked all over for my file but couldn't find it. Then I decided to try to find my auto-saved file. Below is an excerpt from the 'How to recover a backup copy of a score' page on Musescore. (https://musescore.org/en/node/52116)

"Every X minutes during a session (the time period is customizable in the Preferences) and when you close MuseScore, all open files will be auto-saved to the session directory. Browse this directory to eventually find a backup of your file. Each file will have an auto-generated name."

What is the 'Session directory,' and where can I find it? Sorry, I'm new to Musescore. Thanks!


Comments

The very next paragraph o that same page, it explains how to find the session directory for a variety of different operating systems (eg, Windows 10, macOS Sieraa, etc).

On Windows, there is also something called "Virtual Store" where files sometimes can go if there is a problem saving them normally (like if a crash happened at some point while working on the score). If you are on Windows and don't find what you want in the session directory, let us know which version of Windows and someone can help you find the virtual store.

In reply to by Marc Sabatella

I did do the search thing in the next paragraph before posting this. It didn't work, but for some reason, this time, it did. Must've had a brain fart or something :P Anyways, I found the version of my piece I had BEFORE I worked on it and really started to beef it up. I checked to make sure my autosave was on and it was, so it should've been there. I am running Windows 8.1.

MuseScore works in Windows just like many other Windows programs and - IMHO - that's often problematic. Ubuntu (or other Linux) OS's seem to handle things much better. Regardless of your OS, however, you should consider each session as being equivalent to writing on a blackboard with chalk - yes, your files are that fragile.

Save new filenames
Use a flash drive or other removable media

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