Why Am I Getting An “Oops, Your File Could Not Be Uploaded” Error Message In D2L?

Summary

You are getting the “Oops, your file could not be uploaded” error message in D2L when trying to upload an assignment file in Turn-In.

Body

If you are getting the “Oops, your file could not be uploaded” error message in D2L when trying to upload a file in Turn-In, there could be a few reasons why.

Your file does not upload when:

  • The file name contains spaces or special characters. Use only letters, numbers, and periods. Rename your file so that there are no spaces or special characters. 

Example File Name: hNelsonEssay2.pdf

After renaming the file, then try to upload it again.

  • The filename contains illegal characters.

\ / : * ? “ < > | ~ # % & ' { }

Rename your file and try uploading again if it contains these characters.

  • The file name is too long. We recommend that you keep the file name under 45 characters.
  • Avoid using two consecutive periods ( .. ) in a file name.
  • You’ve attempted to attach the file before the file has been uploaded completely. Make sure the green bar has completely loaded to 100% before you finish.
  • This can also happen when you are uploading a large file or have a slow connection. Audio, video, and media rich PowerPoint presentations can result in large files.

 

Upload the Correct File:

When you save a file in Microsoft Office, for example, a file called assignment.docx, you may find two files saved on your computer: assignment.docx and ~$assignment.docx.

This is because Office creates both a temporary file and the document file, where the temporary file begins with ~$. Ensure you are uploading the actual document instead of the temporary file, as the temporary file will not open and contains no data.

 

File Name Technical Guidelines

  • Use letters and numbers, combined with hyphens or underscores, to construct your names.
  • Avoid spaces.
  • Avoid punctuation or any special characters other than hyphens and underscores in your names. Symbols like &, !, #, *, $, @, /, and so forth have special meanings in computer operations.
  • Use ONLY a letter or a number as the first character and the last character of your name. [Why? To be safe. If it doesn't look like a filename at first glance, it might not get a second glance!]
  • Don't make your name ridiculously long! A creative person can be descriptive in 12-18 characters or less.

 

Other Naming Tips

  • Make your names easy for humans to read by using hyphens or initial caps as word boundaries since you are avoiding spaces.
  • Consider using your initials in the name of a file that will be submitted to an Assignment folder.
  • If you use a date in your name, the standard YYYY-MM-DD date format is a popular convention.
  • Never use "final" as part of a name, because you never know!

 

Alternative Solution

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Details

Article ID: 132025
Created
Fri 4/30/21 9:32 AM
Modified
Thu 7/21/22 8:40 AM