Hello Rclarke250 - You know I think you might be incorrect about the deleted files and folders being restored. I did a little test on a folder from which I knew I’d deleted a sub-folder after the original backup, but before the first differential backup. I created a folder called “Backup test,” and used it for an alternate location in which to restore the folder in question. First, I restored the folder using the original backup. Of course the deleted sub-folder was also restored. Then, leaving the restored data in the alternate location, I went to the catalog for the 1st differential backup. I noticed the deleted sub-folder wasn’t listed. I restored the main folder again to the alternate location, using this 1st differential backup. When I checked the alternate location, the deleted sub folder in question had disappeared. I tried this using 2 of the 3 restore options, ie, “Do not replace the file on my computer (recommended),” and “Replace the file on disc only if the file on disc is older.” They both worked the same.
This means that you can organize your folders as much as you want, and backup will remember which ones have been deleted, and not restore them. It would be a nightmare, if it did, because most of your organizing work would be for naught.
I suppose if you accidentally deleted something by mistake, and didn’t realize it until later, you could restore it from the recycle bin, or if that had been deleted you could go back through your backups until you found it in the catalog, and restore it from there. Let me know what you think.