I suddenly realized that if Android has plug-ins automatically modified to cause this problem, there are some doubts.
- Take the A file as an example. If the A file v8.0 is deleted in windows, when opening the A file v1.0 on Android, even if it is modified by the X plug-in, should the A file be upgraded to v8.0 first? Modify it again?
In other words, when Android reversely synchronizes the A file back to Windows, it does not verify whether the A file is the latest version through the cloud, nor does it perform version synchronization, so it directly sends the original A file back.
Are there any problems with this mechanism?
Many of my error files are synchronized with very early original versions, and the file size of the history can also be seen
- The situation of deletion is similar, the A file is v8.0 in Windows, and it is deleted, and it is v1.0 when the Android A file is opened.
At this time, suppose there is an X plug-in that modifies the A file of v1.0. Should you also check the cloud first, and after finding that the A file is deleted, delete it instead of syncing it back to Windows?