Well, I'll go you one better. I have an application (x86) in Win7 64 bit. It has template files in the C:\Program Files (x86)\Blah\Blah\template directory. I opened one of these, made changes to suit my wants, and saved a new file into the directory.
If I do a "File > Save As" from the application, I see this file listed with the others. But it has a small lock (as poster above) on the file icon. Checking the file properties, it's attributes are "AI" compared with simply "A" for the original files installed by the program.
If I navigate to the file from my desktop (i.e., Computer > C > Program Files (x86), etc), the file is not visible. Is there a new file attribute "Invisible?" What about Hidden (which it is not)?
Also, I am listed as the owner of the file.
Finally, the real odd one is, that although the application's "File > Save As" dialog box lists this file, the application does not load this file by default on opening, as it always has in the past. Yes, the name is correct...
Any ideas? Yes, I've searched, probably not well enough.
Thanks!
Tom
ETA: I thought, I'll just drag the file from the "File > Save As" dialog box to the same directory open in another explorer window. I got a "Source and target file are the same". So I saved it to a different directory, closed the program, and copied it over. Now it's in there, no lock. But from the application "File > Save As" box, it still shows the lock, and the application still isn't reading it. Plus, I'd saved an extraneous copy of the file with a silly name, and it remains visible in the "File > Save As" box, but is invisible in the other explorer window.
If I were you guys, I'd tell me that obviously I'm working in two different directories, somehow, but that just isn't the case; I've had a co-worker double check me.
I'm wondering if I should just reboot. Maybe NTFS is somehow out of synch.