Customer: I'm missing data that was entered between January 2012 and today.
Me: Do you have a backup?
Customer: No, but we printed it out, can't you just scan it back into the program?
Me: No, you'll need to re-enter it
Customer: But we already entered it once
Me: Okay, I can examine your dataset then
Customer: Fine (sends the dataset)
Me: Okay it looks like everything you're missing was deleted before 6/4/2012
Customer: Who would have done that?
Me: Someone doing entries at your company...
Customer: Can't you just copy-and-paste it back into where it needs to go?
Me: No, because you've been doing entries for the last four months, and the program record tracking has already been superceded by what you've entered.
Customer: Well we didn't need the info then, but we need it back now
Me: Then re-enter it
Customer: We don't want to, we want you to copy-and-paste it back where it needs to go
Me: With the entries you've made, this has become impossible. It would require a development escalation which could take 3 or more business days, by which time you could probably have re-entered the 6 whole transactions you are missing.
Customer: I really don't see why you can't copy-and-paste it back into where it needs to go.
Me: Well you see, when transactions are entered, they are given a special number that is dated. And since they were deleted before June, the transactional date glue that the program uses for these records is expired. So even though I could copy them out, the glue won't stick them into where it needs to go.
Customer: Well why didn't you just say that?



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