1/27/2024 0 Comments Ultraedit 23 license key![]() Other than that, UE was fine [oh, except: that I couldn't configure the SSH machinery until I had found and changed the ACLs for the UE config files in C:\Windows. And as I mentioned, I was a bit confused by the update: I fire up UE from my limited acct and I get a mysterious dialog and then it says "failed". I see what you're saying, only I doubt seriously that the help file page on "INI file Selection and location" would be even on my top-ten list of "where to look to find SSH". Mofi wrote:And yes, the configuration files can be anywhere - read in help of UltraEdit the page titled INI File Selection and Advanced Settings. Please note, the search order is caused by compatibility. If you only copy your UltraEdit configuration files to the %APPDATA% \IDMComp\UltraEdit directory and not move it, UE will still find it first in the Windows directory and will continue to use it from that location. But I have several shortcuts with an INI file specified on the command line. Well, I have never tried it with a restricted user mode or using built-in administrator account of Windows XP. If not found anywhere the last one is used which is APPDATA for NT4/2000/XP/2003 and WINDIR for all other where environment variable APPDATA does not exist. The last one is not possible on Windows 95/98 as long as the user does not set APPDATA in AUTOEXEC.BAT. In the help it is explained in detail in which order the ProgramName.ini file is searched: first command line parameter, second the environment variable, third the program directory, fourth %WINDIR% and last %APPDATA% \IDMComp\UltraEdit.It's easier for new programs which do not support Windows 95/98 or NT4 to be Windows 2000/XP compatible. But the application data directory on Windows 95/98, if it really exists, can be only found via a registry entry which can but must not be present. That's what all IDM products do, except when installed on Windows 95/98 because the old Windows versions don't have an APPDATA environment variable although Windows 98 SE (not Windows 98) has also an application data directory. ![]() See for example How to transfer configuration settings to a new PC which files you have to move from Windows to the application data directory or any other directory you want, for example with usage of environment variable UEINIDIR. For users who updated from a pre v10.20 installation the existing configuration files are used further independent where they are stored to don't lose any user setting after upgrade.Īnd yes, the configuration files can be anywhere - read in help of UltraEdit the page titled INI File Selection and Advanced Settings. So there is no problem with administrator privileges. Or correctly %APPDATA% \IDMComp\UltraEdit\ which is working on all Windows since Windows NT4. This by default hidden directory is for installations on English Windows 2000/XP:Ĭ:\Documents and Settings\ user account name\Application Data\IDMComp\UltraEdit\ Since v10.20 all new installations store all configuration files in the personal user application data directory as suggested by Microsoft. Even after all of these years, I'm surprised at how many otherwise-shaped-up applications *still* believe it is OK to store their configuration information in the install directory. I didn't get that menu updated because that is *yet*another* thing that you end up needing to do as administrator. This answered a bunch of questions ? about where you were supposed to find it].īernie wrote:Ah, yet another trap for UE being not-sufficiently-XP-aware. Info from Mofi: This topic was created by splitting up the posts from SSH/Telnet functionality in 12.20 - can't find it into this and the linked thread!Īh, yet another trap for UE being not-sufficiently-XP-aware.
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