D
David Candy
This is a problem that takes 15 seconds to solve. But you are making it hard. I'm about to lose interest.
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http://webdiary.smh.com.au/archives/_comment/001075.html
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"David Candy" <.> wrote in message Did that command
reg add HKCR\exefile\shell /ve
restore the original problem? Or did you run it twice. I get really sick of people who won't talk. I'm not there. I don't know what happened if you don't tell me. Try being verbose.
Because I can tell from your last post that it didn't work because you typed it wrong. Did you type it a second time right?
You put Open in and said you now couldn't open files. I sent you something to type to remove the open and restore it to how it was before you put open in. You left out the space before /ve.
All keys have a default value. I wanted to know what it was set to, if anything.
So can you open regedit or not. If not retype that command (copy it and paste it so the spaces are right). If you can start Regedit delete the shell/ve subkey as by leaving out the space it added a new key rather than removing the open you entered. Not that the presence of it will hurt anything.
Perhaps you typed regedit in cmd and fixed it manually. I don't know what you did.
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http://webdiary.smh.com.au/archives/_comment/001075.html
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"David Candy" <.> wrote in message Did that command
reg add HKCR\exefile\shell /ve
restore the original problem? Or did you run it twice. I get really sick of people who won't talk. I'm not there. I don't know what happened if you don't tell me. Try being verbose.
Because I can tell from your last post that it didn't work because you typed it wrong. Did you type it a second time right?
You put Open in and said you now couldn't open files. I sent you something to type to remove the open and restore it to how it was before you put open in. You left out the space before /ve.
All keys have a default value. I wanted to know what it was set to, if anything.
So can you open regedit or not. If not retype that command (copy it and paste it so the spaces are right). If you can start Regedit delete the shell/ve subkey as by leaving out the space it added a new key rather than removing the open you entered. Not that the presence of it will hurt anything.
Perhaps you typed regedit in cmd and fixed it manually. I don't know what you did.