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Solve : Compressed zip file *censored*? |
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Answer» Hello EVERYONE thanks for reading... I created a compressed zipped FOLDER so I could password protect some files (under 1 gig... OS is XP home)... I had no idea long this would take... Anyway, I input the password and leave for a while... When I come back I have an error message stating I have damaged or corrupt file... A small percentage of the files are password protected, most are not. When I try to set up a password for them I get a message that the folder already has a password. When I try to remove the password I get an error message... When I try to extract everything in it I get an error message. When I try to move everything out of the compressed folder I can do it for some but not all... When I try to delete what is in the compressed folder I get an error message (The compressed zipped folder is invalid or corrupt) and I can't! Thanks BC... The file size is 930 MB... everything in the folder did compress successfully... The problem were successfully created a password... it did for some but not for most...There is only one ZIP archive. the "compressed folder" is not a folder, but rather a .zip file. Windows XP has a built-in shell extension that let's you look at zip archives as "compressed folders" (Which is silly, because then people assume based on that that they are dealing with a folder, when they are really dealing with a file). HOWEVER: Within a zip archive, each file is compressed separately, which presumably includes any encryption done via a password. In your case if the file is not actually corrupted but just in a odd inconsistent state, you might have better luck opening it with another archiver, which might correctly recognize that not all the files are ENCRYPTED. I would make a copy of the file, first, though. Quote Is downloading a third party archive program a possible fix? I would be able to transfer the folder and its contents to the new software and extract from there? A Compressed folder is actually a .ZIP archive, for which there are plenty of software products available. For what it's worth, I always disable the built-in OS support for ZIP files on Windows, because I find it unreliable and annoying, instead opting for other software products and dealing with the .zip archives as actual files, because that is what they are. There are programs specifically made to extract files from corrupted ZIP files. There is Zip2Fix and Zip Repair Pro. I used one of them in the past and it worked well; I don't remember which though. |
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