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On 3/08/2010 15:36, stevenvh wrote:
> I'm not going to fight over this, but beta 37 let me *choose* where to install
> the program. And I didn't install it in Program files.
You probably ran it elevated the first time (this does provide the choice).
Or something else changed on your system. Our revision control system
confirms that the only change in the setup project between 37 and 38 were
the text strings related to the beta version.
If elevation or system change doesn't explain the issue, then something is
strange is going on.
-- Chris
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Chris Cason <del### [at] deletethistoopovrayorg> wrote:
> On 3/08/2010 15:36, stevenvh wrote:
> > I'm not going to fight over this, but beta 37 let me *choose* where to install
> > the program. And I didn't install it in Program files.
>
> You probably ran it elevated the first time (this does provide the choice).
What's elevation? (Yes, I should know, but I only went to school 'til I was 25!)
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stevenvh wrote:
> What's elevation? (Yes, I should know, but I only went to school 'til I was 25!)
It refers to elevated privileges. You picked "run as administrator" to run
it, or you logged in as the administrator, or some such.
Basically, you gave it permission to write to Program Files before you
started it.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
C# - a language whose greatest drawback
is that its best implementation comes
from a company that doesn't hate Microsoft.
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Darren New <dne### [at] sanrrcom> wrote:
> stevenvh wrote:
> > What's elevation? (Yes, I should know, but I only went to school 'til I was 25!)
> It refers to elevated privileges. You picked "run as administrator" to run
> it, or you logged in as the administrator, or some such.
> Basically, you gave it permission to write to Program Files before you
> started it.
I didn't know there was such a feature in Windows XP (which is what the
OP is using, as far as I can see).
--
- Warp
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Warp wrote:
> I didn't know there was such a feature in Windows XP (which is what the
> OP is using, as far as I can see).
There is. Most people don't know about it because by default the accounts
most people use are administrator accounts. So chances are the OP was
already running it elevated. (I think XP makes it harder to get to, also, so
it's less obvious there's a way to run things with someone else's privilege.)
In any case, that's what "elevated" means in Chris's post, even if the
distinction isn't applicable to the problem being experienced. :-)
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
C# - a language whose greatest drawback
is that its best implementation comes
from a company that doesn't hate Microsoft.
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Darren New <dne### [at] sanrrcom> wrote:
> Warp wrote:
> > I didn't know there was such a feature in Windows XP (which is what the
> > OP is using, as far as I can see).
> There is. Most people don't know about it because by default the accounts
> most people use are administrator accounts. So chances are the OP was
> already running it elevated. (I think XP makes it harder to get to, also, so
> it's less obvious there's a way to run things with someone else's privilege.)
I installed beta 38 on a WinXP system using an account which as admin
privileges, and it did install it in the application data folder, so at
least I can confirm that part.
--
- Warp
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> Darren New<dne### [at] sanrrcom> wrote:
>> stevenvh wrote:
>>> What's elevation? (Yes, I should know, but I only went to school 'til I was 25!)
>
>> It refers to elevated privileges. You picked "run as administrator" to run
>> it, or you logged in as the administrator, or some such.
>
>> Basically, you gave it permission to write to Program Files before you
>> started it.
>
> I didn't know there was such a feature in Windows XP (which is what the
> OP is using, as far as I can see).
>
When running windows XP, you have administrator provilege by default.
But, yes, you can "run as..." with XP: Just right click some executable
and sellect that option.
Alain
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On 7/31/2010 4:46 AM, stevenvh wrote:
> 2. The uninstaller (for both beta 37 and 38) deletes the settings from the "My
> Documents" folder. Isn't the whole idea of placing them there to retain them
> when a new version is installed?
What do you mean by "settings"? Do you mean stuff like INI files and
sample scenes?
--
http://isometricland.com
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On 8/5/2010 10:27 PM, SharkD wrote:
> What do you mean by "settings"? Do you mean stuff like INI files and
> sample scenes?
For clarification, other types of settings are things you can't (or
normally shouldn't) modify yourself, such as the last INI file used to
create a rendering, or the last directory in which you opened/saved a
file, or the list of 10 most recently edited files...
--
http://isometricland.com
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