

Then, you can choose to restore or download any version of any single file, or restore or download an entire folder (including any subfolders) to its state at any desired point in time (subject to the Dropbox bounds stated above). Choose the version you want to restore by clicking the Restore button Alternatively: Open the current version of the file in question Click the file name in the top bar If there are old versions of the file available, you will be able to click the Version History button Select this and browse the file versions. The app allows you to select any folder in your Dropbox and shows you a timeline of all edits for that folder. If you are on a Mac (OS X 10.7 or later), you can try out a new app called Revisions (available at ) that I've been working on. Dropbox Rewind works by reverting your folders or even your entire account back to a specific point in time in the last 30 days (or longer for Professional users)restoring everything in your Dropbox account to what your file system looked like before your mishap. I haven't used it so cannot vouch for it, but many seem very happy with it! You could use the script written by clark800, linked to in a separate answer to this question. Based on discussions in the Dropbox forums, it seems like they are also willing and able to restore any given folder to an arbitrary date, as long as it is within the bounds stored by Dropbox (30 days for a basic account for accounts with the packrat feature all the way back to when packrat was activated). (If you can’t find it, use CMD-SHIFT-G and copy the whole file path in.If you've recently done something that has modified a large bunch of files in your Dropbox and you want to revert all those changes, you can contact the support staff at Dropbox to have the modifications rolled back. There is a single space after “Group”, but no other spaces. ~/Library/Group Containers/.agenda.macos/Release/Application

If you don’t have any backup, and don’t have too much data, you could use a tool we have for getting back data. You could restore the data from yesterday. The easiest would be if you had some sort of backup, like Time Machine.
