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I deleted some files, and they are available in Bin. If I try to undo the delete attempt by pressing ⌘ Z, it gives me the below errors: enter image description here

My Observations:

I found there are 2 Bins; if I open Get Info for both, the difference I see is - 1 has Kind=Folder, other has Kind=Bin.

The Bin (Folder) is available at: /Users/shripalmehta/

But Bin (Bin) has no path.

If I drag and drop a file into Bin (Folder), it appears in Bin (Bin) as well, and such file can be reverted just as normally we would (from either of the Bins). But if I press ⌘ ⌫ it goes directly into Bin (Bin) and it becomes unrecoverable!

How do I fix this? Is is some kind of Permission issue?

Edit:

  1. I'm using MacOS Big Sur 11.6 on MacBook Air M1 (2020)
  2. Added My Observations above
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  • What happens if you just drag them back to where they came from, or to the desktop? You can only Undo if the very last step before that was the delete.
    – Tetsujin
    Commented Nov 4, 2021 at 8:51
  • It is the very last step. Also, it doesn't allow drag and drop either! When I drag and drop the file from Bin to Desktop, the file disappears from both locations, completely unable to recover!! Commented Nov 4, 2021 at 8:53
  • I even tried doing ⌘ C + ⌘ V but even then the file disappears from both locations! Commented Nov 4, 2021 at 8:59
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    bin is not what you're looking for. Deleted files go to Trash. There are multiple Trash locations, one for the system, one per user & one per attached volume. Don't try figure out how they map. Run Disk Utility on the volume the files were on before deletion.
    – Tetsujin
    Commented Nov 4, 2021 at 9:18
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    Since Catalina, but that's just a user-facing name. If you're going to dig around [which I still recommend you shouldn't] in Terminal you'll find it's still actually called Trash. I highly recommend you do not mess with the Trash structure unless you really know what you're doing.
    – Tetsujin
    Commented Nov 6, 2021 at 10:56

1 Answer 1

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I was dealing with this issue a while back, and one day it just fixed itself, though here is the workaround I used.


  1. Open up terminal
  2. type mv (space is important) and then drag the file from the trash into the terminal window. (It is important to drag the file, because whenever this happened to me, the file was not in ~/.trash)
  3. Type where you want the file to be moved to (e.g. to move to your downloads type ~/downloads, you can also just drag the folder from finder).

Example: mv /users/yourname/.trash/deletedfile ~/downloads

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  • It got fixed when I upgraded the macOS to Monterey. Commented Feb 23, 2023 at 22:48

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