On Thu, 23 May 2013, Jaap Karssenberg wrote:
> Very likely your index file is corrupted. Try restoring it by running "zim
> --index -V /path/to/notebook" from the terminal.
Indeed, this fixed it.
But how can it be corrupted? I have no other sign that my hardware is
faulty.
Could zim detect this corruption for example by handling the exception
seen?
On Thu, 23 May 2013, Jaap Karssenberg wrote:
> Very likely your index file is corrupted. Try restoring it by running "zim
> --index -V /path/to/notebook" from the terminal.
Indeed, this fixed it.
But how can it be corrupted? I have no other sign that my hardware is
faulty.
Could zim detect this corruption for example by handling the exception
seen?
Cheers,
--
Raphaël Hertzog ◈ Debian Developer
Do you like what I do? Support my free software work on Debian and Ubuntu: raphaelhertzog. com/support- my-work/
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