When you copy a file to another location the original file is deleted true or false

To delete your Google Drive files, move them to the trash. Files in trash will be automatically deleted after 30 days. You can from your trash before the 30-day time window. You can also permanently delete them to empty your trash. If you delete, restore, or permanently delete multiple files or folders at once, it might take time for you to notice the changes. 

Move a file to the trash

To remove a file from your Drive, put it in your trash. The file will stay in your trash for 30 days before being automatically deleted. When you put a file in the trash:

  • If you own the file, people you’ve shared it with can make a copy. .
  • If you don’t own the file, removing the file from your Drive only removes it for you.

On the web

  1. On your computer, go to drive.google.com.
  2. Click a file.
  3. Click Remove
    When you copy a file to another location the original file is deleted true or false
    .

Drive for desktop

When you sync files  between Google Drive and your computer, any files you put in your trash in one place will be put in the trash everywhere.

 

Empty your trash

You can permanently delete an individual file or empty your entire trash.

  • After you delete a file permanently, anyone you’ve shared the file will lose access to it.
  • If you want others to be able to view the file, you can transfer ownership to someone else.

When you copy a file to another location the original file is deleted true or false

Empty your entire trash

  1. On your computer, go to drive.google.com.
  2. On the left, click Trash.
  3. Make sure there are no files you want to keep.
  4. At the top right, click Empty trash. 

Tip: If you don't see "Empty trash", on the top next to Trash, click Down arrow

When you copy a file to another location the original file is deleted true or false
 
When you copy a file to another location the original file is deleted true or false
 Empty trash. 

Delete an individual file forever

  1. On your computer, go to drive.google.com.
  2. On the left, click Trash.
  3. Click a file.
  4. At the top, click Delete forever
    When you copy a file to another location the original file is deleted true or false
    .

 

Recover a file from the trash

If there’s a file in your trash you want to keep, put it back in "My Drive." If you’re not the owner of the file and want to use it:

  • Make a copy of the file.
  • Contact the owner to have them restore it.

On the web

  1. On your computer, go to drive.google.com.
  2. On the left, click Trash.
  3. Click the file you want to restore.
  4. At the top, click Restore
    When you copy a file to another location the original file is deleted true or false
    .
    • Tip: You can sort your trashed files by trashed date to find the oldest or newest files trashed. 
  5. You can find restored files in their original location. If the original location no longer exists, look in "My Drive."

When you copy a file to another location the original file is deleted true or false

Drive for desktop

If you can still find a file you trashed in your Drive trash, try restoring it from Drive to ensure any metadata, like previous revisions, is preserved. If the file is no longer available in your Drive trash, but is available in your computer's Recycle Bin (Windows) or Trash (MacOS), you can restore it with following instructions.  

If you're not the owner of the file, contact the owner to have them restore it.

Tip: If you have important information in a file, you can make a copy of it. Open the file and click File 

When you copy a file to another location the original file is deleted true or false
 Make a copy.

If you can't recover your deleted file

If you delete a file and need to get it back, contact a Drive specialist. To find your file, call or chat with us.

Restore files you deleted

If you deleted something recently using Google Drive or the Google Drive desktop app, you might be able to restore the file yourself.

Restore from your Trash

  1. On a computer, go to drive.google.com/drive/trash.
    • Tip: You can sort your trashed files by trashed date to find the oldest or newest files trashed.
  2. Right-click the file you want to recover.
  3. Click Restore.
  4. You can find restored files in their original location. If the original location no longer exists, look in "My Drive."
Find a file you don't think you deleted

When you copy a file to another location the original file is deleted true or false

Try these steps

Check the activity panel

  1. On a computer, go to drive.google.com.
  2. At the top right, click Info
    When you copy a file to another location the original file is deleted true or false
    .
  3. Click "Activity" to check the activity panel.
  4. Scroll down and look for your file.
  1. On a computer, go to drive.google.com.
  2. In the search bar, click the icon to the far right.
  3. Use the to find your file. For example, to see spreadsheets, next to 'Type,' click the down arrow, then click 'Spreadsheets.'

When you copy a file to another location the original file is deleted true or false

Learn why files go missing

If you created the file

If you can’t find a file that you created in Drive, it might have lost the folder it was in. The file still exists, but is harder to find.

How files lose their folder

  • You create a file in someone else's folder and they delete that folder. The file isn't deleted. It's automatically moved to your My Drive.
    Important: Only you can delete the files you own.
  • You share a folder with someone and they remove your file from the folder. The file isn't deleted, it's automatically moved to your My Drive.

Find unorganized files

  1. On a computer, go to drive.google.com.
  2. In the search bar, enter: is:unorganized owner:me
  3. When you find the file, move it to a folder in My Drive so it’s easier to find next time.

Search now

If someone else created the file

When someone creates a file, they can delete, rename, and restore it. Contact the person who created the file and ask them to restore it or share it with you again.

If it was in a folder someone else created

If someone deleted that folder, you won't see that folder in your Drive anymore.

Find files you created in deleted folders

Find all files that are in deleted folders

To make that file easier to find in the future, move it into a folder in "My Drive."

More on how to find files

Try advanced search

To refine your search in Drive, use a search phrase on your computer with one of these options:

Search forExampleExact phrase

"Use quotes around an exact phrase"

Exclude a word

Water but not lakes:

water -lakes

File owner

Files Dad owns:

owner:[email protected]

Files shared by others

Files Mom shared with you:

from:[email protected]

You shared files

Files you shared with Mom:

to:[email protected]

Starred items

is:starred

Deleted items

is:trashed

File type

Spreadsheet file type:

type:spreadsheet

Time frame

Before or after January 18, 2015.

before:2015-01-18

"Use quotes around an exact phrase"0

Title

"Use quotes around an exact phrase"1

App

Files opened in Google Drive:

"Use quotes around an exact phrase"2

Recovered file types

For personal accounts: We can help you recover recently deleted files for a limited time after they’re deleted if you use Google Drive with a consumer account (and not an account through your work, school, or other group) and one of these is true:

What will happen when we copy a file in another location?

Answer: If you cut a file or a folder, it does not disappear, but instead becomes transparent. When you paste that file/folder, it is moved to the new location and disappears from the original location, so in a way using Cut-Paste with a file or folder is equivalent to moving it using the Move action.

What happens to the original file when you copy it?

In digital file management, copying is a file operation that creates a new file which has the same content as an existing file.

When you move a file a copy of the file remains in its original location True or false?

If you are moving the file to a different drive or across the network to a mapped drive or another system, the file will be COPIED to the target location and the original file will remain in the original location.

When we copy any file it removes from the original location?

Answer: No it will not remove from original location.