Acrobat Reader 7 - Healing via file assocation
Gday all,
I know from reading previous posts that you have to set up Adobe Acrobat Reader 7 to self heal via file assocation - I was wondering if anyone could expand on that. I've got a transform for Adobe Acrobat reader 7 that I've created a parent feature for, that has all the Current User registry settings in it. Its structured like so, with the asterisk next to the feature I created:
Self healing of these settings works fine when we run Reader from the shortcuts. I've added a file association for .pdf (which is in the feature ReaderProgramFiles) - however it still doesn't self heal when running from either double clicking on a .pdf or running one from IE. In the File Assocations view of Wise, I've set up:
Extension: pdf
ProgID: AcroExch.Document
and MIME Type is set to application/pdf
What have I done wrong?
Rgds
Paul
I know from reading previous posts that you have to set up Adobe Acrobat Reader 7 to self heal via file assocation - I was wondering if anyone could expand on that. I've got a transform for Adobe Acrobat reader 7 that I've created a parent feature for, that has all the Current User registry settings in it. Its structured like so, with the asterisk next to the feature I created:
Installation Features
CustomiseFeature *
ReaderProgram Files
Reader_Big_Features
Self healing of these settings works fine when we run Reader from the shortcuts. I've added a file association for .pdf (which is in the feature ReaderProgramFiles) - however it still doesn't self heal when running from either double clicking on a .pdf or running one from IE. In the File Assocations view of Wise, I've set up:
Extension: pdf
ProgID: AcroExch.Document
and MIME Type is set to application/pdf
What have I done wrong?
Rgds
Paul
0 Comments
[ + ] Show comments
Answers (0)
Please log in to answer
Be the first to answer this question
Rating comments in this legacy AppDeploy message board thread won't reorder them,
so that the conversation will remain readable.
so that the conversation will remain readable.