Free Download Full Intuit QuickBooks Pro 2012 Free Download Full Intuit QuickBooks Pro 2012. How To Convert pdf to word without software - Duration: 9:04. Karim hamdadi 7,463,639 views. You can also view and download your purchased product versions by signing into your Intuit account*. *Available for U.S.
If you find that the working copy of the QuickBooks 2012 data file becomes corrupted or gets destroyed, you need to restore the QuickBooks data file so you can again begin using QuickBooks. Restoring the QuickBooks data file is easy if you’ve recently backed it up.
If you haven’t recently (or ever) backed up the QuickBooks data file, you’ll have to restore the QuickBooks data file, which means starting over from scratch. This means, for example, that you rerun the QuickBooks Installation and Setup. You’ll need to re-enter all the old data. In short, restoring without a backup copy of the QuickBooks data file means that you start over at square one.
To restore the QuickBooks data file from the backup copy of the file, put the backup disk into the drive and then follow these steps:
- Launch QuickBooks and choose the File→Open or Restore Company command.QuickBooks displays the Open or Restore Company dialog box, as shown in the illustration below.
- Indicate what type of file you want to restore.You can use the Open or Restore Company dialog box to open a regular QuickBooks data file, a backup copy of the QuickBooks file, or a portable file. If you want to restore a backup copy, predictably, you click the button labeled Restore A Backup Copy.
- Click Next.QuickBooks displays another version of the Open or Restore Company dialog box, as shown in the following illustration.
- Tell QuickBooks whether the backup copy is stored on your company or at QuickBooks’ offsite data center.To do this, you just click the button that labels your backup copy file’s location.
- Click Next.QuickBooks displays the Open Backup Copy dialog box, as shown in the following illustration.
- Identify the backup file that you’ll use for the restoration.Use the Open Backup Copy dialog box to specify the location of and then the specific backup file that you’ll use for the restoration. You can use the Look In box to identify the disk and folder storing the backup file. After you identify the location of the backup file, double-click the file.
- Click Next.QuickBooks displays yet another copy of the Open or Restore Company dialog box. It simply tells you that QuickBooks is about to ask you where you want to store the newly restored file. (Er, that QuickBooks needs to tell you it’s about to ask a question seems a little strange, but let’s not get bogged down with that. . . .)When you restore the company data file by using the backup copy, you destroy the current working version of the file. In other words, QuickBooks takes the backup copy and copies it over the to-be-restored company data file. Therefore, before you restore company data files, make sure that you’re using the right backup copy and that you’re overwriting the corrupted, to-be-restored company file.If you’re uncomfortable deleting or over-writing the old (possibly corrupted) QuickBooks data file, you can use a new filename for the restored file. You’ll do this as part of Step 9.
- Click Next.QuickBooks displays the Save Company File As dialog box, as shown in the following illustration.
- Tell QuickBooks where it should restore the backup copy and then click Save.Use the Save Company File As dialog box to pick a location for the backed up file. You’ll probably pick the same location as the existing file. And if you do this and you also use the same name for the QuickBooks file, QuickBooks displays a message asking you to confirm that you want to overwrite the existing file. You click Yes.After you click Yes, QuickBooks displays another message box entitled Delete Entire File. Confirm that you want to delete the existing (and presumably corrupt) company data file by typing the word yes into the message box. Then click OK. QuickBooks uses the backup copy to overwrite the to-be-restored company file. Again, however, note that you can also choose to use a new filename for the restored file.
- Enter any transactions that took place since your last backup.If you entered transactions after you last backed up the QuickBooks company file, you now re-enter those transactions into QuickBooks. For example, if you last backed up QuickBooks on Friday of last week, you need to enter any transactions that you’ve created since last Friday.