First, they would not be on the "D" drive. The "D" drive is a small partition created when Windows is installed and only contains the basic information of Windows. Files that are :deleted, aren't really deleted until at sometime the area that they take up on the hard drive are written over. There is some software out there, Active UNDelete is one, that can help recover files that nave been deleted IF they are still intact on the hard drive.
Linux will not delete a partition unless you tell it to. If you have accidentally deleted a partition, but have not written to the disk, you may be able to restore most or all of the data that was on it. The program "testdisk", found on many Linux LiveCDs and partition editors, can restore the deleted partition flags.
If a partition is formatted, or deleted, then the information saved on that partition is also deleted. So, if there is any information on the partition you wish saved, backup that information or copy it to another partition or another location before deleting the partition.
Once something is deleted from your harddrive, it's gone. Sorry.
Because you did not format it properly, or you have deleted partitions, and all free space is in unallocated sector.
There are various recovery tools available for purchase that can assist in the recovery of deleted partitions.
On MS platforms, the system partition is used to hold the boot files. The boot partition holds all the windows operating system files. Leave it to Microsuck to mis-lable the partition hiearchy. The system partition holds what is loaded and executed first after the computer runs through its preliminary BIOS boot sequence. It tells the computer where to start loading the operating system from; the boot partition. The boot partition is where all the program files (thousands of them) needed by the operating system are stored. If the system partition is deleted; the computer will not find the operating system. If the boot partition is deleted, again; the computer will not find the operating system.
basically it is returning the harddrive to a blank state. All programs and files will be deleted
you accidentally deleted a partition containing important data, use a partition editor (such as Fdisk, Partition Magic, Super Fdisk and EASEUS Partition Manager).In fact, you can still try data recovery software to recovery your files even the partition is deletedhttp://www.asoftech.com/adr/You can use Wondershare Disk Manager Free(100% Freeware) It can create, delete, resize, copy…and recover partitions
Delete all data on a hard drive. Ditto!
you will cry
The information is technically still there. When a partition is "deleted", only the flags that indicate where it stops and starts are removed. The flags can be put back, and the files will be accessible, just as they were before.
The information is technically still there. When a partition is "deleted", only the flags that indicate where it stops and starts are removed. The flags can be put back, and the files will be accessible, just as they were before.