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Excellent. You should be able to edit it. Just in case, I would save a local copy for yourself as well.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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I'm able to edit it, but starting from the version of 28.01. There is a couple of days work lost.
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It wasn't autosaved since 28.01, neither was it saved when I pressed "Save draft". That means, I don't see the versions that were supposed to be saved.
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Or this?
How to code without thinking?[^]
Under the revisions tab, check "show auto-saved drafts" and you can start going through and seeing if those are more complete.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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trying to find the revisions tab 
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THere is only one revision there, that of 28.01 
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Ah, yes, now I see the autosaved version
Thanks a lot!!
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Hi Sean,
I have found a revision with a seeming most complete content (that of 18:11, 10.02). How can I turn it into my actual version? When I click "work on it", the editor opens with another content.
Regards,
Vassili
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Can you please send me a link to the version you want? Then I can send you the HTML if that helps.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Thanks a lot! I can work with it.
KR
Vassili
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Hi Sean,
it would also be nice to know how can I save my work on this article online. Actually, if I make some changes to the version I can edit(that of 28.01), and press "save draft", I still can edit only the version of (28.01). Is this article cursed? With the html file you've sent to me, I can delete this article and start the new one. Should I?
Regards,
Vassili
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All the drafts are being saved. If you go back to a draft you can do a few things, if for some reason you can't edit it. There is a Rollback button so you can rollback to whatever draft you want, provided you check the box for the draft version. And you should also see icons in the upper right of each article. One should be "get the article's HTML for editing offline." If you click that you should get that draft's HTML. That's how I sent you the HTML for that specific draft.
Then keep a local copy for yourself, just in case (that's always just a good practice) as you go along.
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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yes, I worked on it since 28.01. It is (was) somewhat different from the version I can see now.
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I'm in the middle of writing an article, do a save, and notice that the layout has changed!? It looks like an improvement, and it wasn't DOA. Nicely done!
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Deploy ASP.NET Core Web API on IIS[^]
Looking at the source, this was originally a blog post:

But it's come through as an article instead.
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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Sadly it won't let me change it back
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Hi
I have uploaded a file while, trying to download view, it throws error.
[^]
Please help!
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Is this for an article that you are intending to write?
draft[^]
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Please email me (sean@codeproject.com) the code in a .rar, or renamed .zip (ie .notzip) file
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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When updating an article, is there any way to compare it to the most recently published version, similar to how the Revisions link works for a published article?
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Under the Revisions tab on your article, check the two versions you wish to compare then hit, Compare:
Robust C++ : Object Pools[^]
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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I didn't expect to find a draft in that list. Thanks.
But it doesn't work for me! When I choose the latest draft of Debugging Live Systems and try to compare it to the most recently published version, I see no changes at all, which isn't surprising because it says
Comparing revision 6 (Wednesday, February 5, 2020 10:47am) and revision 6 (Tuesday, February 4, 2020 2:49pm)
when the draft version is revision 7.
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