I found a reference to whitelisting a program with Windows, here:
https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/all/ransomeware-protection-adding-applications-to-the/842850e6-4312-49b6-9c10-09bf3ba1804a
Sadly I followed the instructions and it didn't fix the problem.
My IT guy came by and suggested I go to "Windows Security > Virus & threat
protection > Protection history", and click on a recent item.
Sure enough, it showed
App or process blocked: gvim.exe
...
Blocked by: Controlled folder access
There was a link, "Controlled folder access settings" > "Allow an app
through Controlled folder access" which shows "Allow an app through
Controlled folder access".
There's a list there of allowed apps, and a button, "+ Add an allowed
app". I used that to allow gvim and away I went. *No more problems.*
On Monday, May 13, 2024 at 4:07:46 PM UTC-4 Richard Pennenga wrote:
> Has anyone else seen this?
>
> I have an existing text file (foo.py) in a folder backed up by OneDrive.
> I created the file using Notepad++. I opened the file using vim, modified
> the text and tried to write it (":w<cr>"). I get the following:
>
> *"foo.py" E514: Write error (file system full?)*
> *WARNING: Original file may be lost or damaged*
> *don't quit the editor until the file is successfully written!*
>
> Notepad++ can read and write the file just fine.
>
> Any ideas?
>
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