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Thino Trash Bin

Thino Trash Bin

Feature Info

Available in both Thino Basic and Thino Pro

Thino natively supports the trash bin feature. When you use the trash bin feature, the original text will be marked with [deleted:true]. This mark will be used as the unique standard for Thino to determine whether it exists in the trash bin. When it is in CANVAS or multiple files, it will insert deleted:true into the metadata.

After version 2.2.4, the [deleted] flag will become an icon Thino Trash Bin--Number display

  • Trash bin mode (default)
    • The deleted content will add the [deleted] flag
    • When you click delete, it will ask you to confirm, and you can restore a Thino from the trash bin at any time.
    • You can permanently delete a Thino from the trash bin at any time. Correspondingly, it will also be completely deleted from the source page, and this operation will have no recovery room.
  • Direct delete mode
    • You can set it in Thino settings -> Advanced, the deleted Thino content will be deleted directly and cannot be restored from the trash bin or other methods.

Note

  • If you delete a Thino in the archive, it will be moved to the trash bin.
  • It is not recommended to use Obsidian memos (i.e. version 1.x) and Thino together (version 2.x)
  • It is not recommended to use Thino outside of Thino, which will cause unpredictable problems, such as using synchronization users, deleting files locally, but the cloud does not know.
  • Because of the change in the deletion mechanism, the deleted content will be in different places, and users are very likely to confuse themselves.
  • Because of the combined effect of deletion and synchronization, some content is deleted in the lower version, and it still exists in the higher version of other terminals and re-enters through synchronization.

Tips: If you need to hide the flag and understand the reason for the flag, you can refer to Obsidian Style-Hide Thino Mark