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Recycle bin

 

Starting with Windows 95, a simulated garbage can used for deleting files and folders. The recycle bin keeps the files intact in case the user wants to restore them, but can be "emptied" from time to time to save disk space.

Drag and Drop

The icon of a file or folder is dragged to the recycle bin and released. Microsoft introduced the recycle bin as a humorous attempt at being politically correct for the 1990s instead of the trash can metaphor used in the Macintosh. See trash can.

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Wikipedia: Recycle bin (computing)
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An example icon of an empty trash can
An example icon of a trash can that contains files

In computing, a recycle bin, or trash, is temporary storage for files that have been deleted in a file manager by the user, but not yet permanently erased from the physical media. Typically, a recycle bin is presented as a special file directory to the user (whether or not it is actually a single directory depends on the implementation), allowing the user to browse deleted files, undelete those that were deleted by mistake, or delete them permanently (either one by one, or by the "Empty Trash" function).

Within a trash folder, a record is kept of each file and/or directory's original location. On certain operating systems, files must be moved out of the trash before they can be accessed again.

Whether or not files deleted by a program go to the recycle bin depends on its level of integration with a particular desktop environment and its function. Low-level utilities usually bypass this layer entirely and delete files immediately. A program that includes file manager functionality may or may not send files to the recycle bin, or it may allow the user to choose between these options.

Contents

History

Mac OS X trash icon when it is empty.
Mac OS X trash icon when it contains files.

A trash can icon for deleting files was implemented during the development of the Apple Lisa user interface in 1982. The concept carried over to the Apple Macintosh.[1]

Apple Inc. sued to prevent other software companies from offering graphical user interfaces similar to its own. Apple lost most of its claims but courts agreed Apple's Trash icon was original and protected by copyright.[2] Non-Apple software may use other metaphors for file deletion, such as Recycle Bin, Smart Eraser, or Shredder.[3]

In early versions of the Macintosh Finder, Trash contents were listed in volatile memory. Files moved to the Trash would appear there only until the Finder session ended, then they would be automatically erased. When System 7 was released, the Trash became a folder that retained its contents until the user chose to empty the trash.

Recycle Bin first appeared in Windows 95. In this version, the original location record of the file is stored, but the folder itself didn't allow subdirectories. When a folder is deleted, its containing files are moved into the bin and mixed with other deleted files. The directory structure can only be restored if the batch of files are "undeleted". A revised Recycle Bin allows for subdirectory trees within the recycle bin.

Implementations

Windows Vista Recycle Bin when it contains files.

Recycle bin functionality is usually integrated into a desktop environment and its file manager. Examples include:

The KDE, GNOME[4] and Xfce implementations comply with the freedesktop.org Trash specification[5], ensuring that any applications written with this specification in mind will be interoperable with any trash can implementation.

Under Mac OS X, when a file is deleted in Finder, it is moved to a .Trashes folder, and when viewing the device's available space the space occupied by the deleted files is shown as occupied.

Some implementations may contain "shredding" functionality to counter data remanence.

Other uses

Mac OS has long allowed dragging a disk icon to the Trash as a method for ejecting a disk, but this does not place the disk in the Trash folder nor does it erase the disk. In Mac OS X the Trash icon temporarily changes to an Eject or Disconnect symbol whenever storage volumes are dragged.

The GNOME Human Interface Guidelines cite such behavior as an example of a discouraged metaphor. [6]

See also

References


 
 

 

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