Macworld (USA)

How to fix the “cannot be autosaved” bug

An oddball problem with an oddball fix and some workaround­s.

- BY GLENN FLIEISHMAN

Autosave is a highly useful macos feature that prevents losing incrementa­l changes to a document you’re working on between the periods when you press Command-s or choose File → Save. As you work away, the current state of the document is updated temporaril­y. When you close the file, changes are applied even if you don’t use the Save command or keystroke.

But what if autosave goes south? Some users, including a Macworld reader, have seen the error in various

macos apps dating back nearly a decade: “The document could not be autosaved. Your most recent changes might be lost.” The dialog box explaining this has an OK button and nothing else.

> What’s the explanatio­n? It appears to be a permission­s problem between so-called “sandboxed” apps and the operating system about whether a file may be written to or not. A sandboxed app is one delivered from the App Store, including Apple’s own free and paid apps, that has a number of restrictio­ns placed upon it that increase user privacy and security. Sandboxed apps can only perform certain tasks and with certain files. (Apps offered directly by developers have freer range, but you may have to approve certain kinds of access [ go.macworld.com/iacc] via the Security & Privacy preference pane’s Privacy tab.)

Savvy users have figured out that this problem can be fixed by emptying the recent documents list. In affected software, choose

File → Open Recent → Clear Menu. When this bug occurs, this action appears to free up slots for save or refresh permission­s. Some users have only had the autosave issue occur when working with extremely large files; others, when they have lots of documents open.

If you encounter the problem and clearing recent files doesn’t solve it, here are a few more strategies:

> Create a fresh document, copy the old document’s contents (Edit → Select All), paste them into the new document, and save immediatel­y.

> Disable autosaving, which is a preference in the General preference pane labeled “Ask to keep changes when closing documents.” With this box checked, autosave no longer occurs. You can use the Save feature, and will be prompted to save when closing a document.

> Divide the document into smaller separate files by copying and pasting it a piece at a time into new documents and saving those. ■

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The General preference pane lets you set continuous saving for supported apps.
The General preference pane lets you set continuous saving for supported apps.
 ??  ?? This dialog seems to indicate something is off with sandboxing, a security feature.
This dialog seems to indicate something is off with sandboxing, a security feature.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia