Hi. I followed the directions at http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;321379 for How to add
the Print Directory feature for folders in Windows XP. I had problems
opening shortcuts to other directories in Explore after that -- it would
start the Search Companion. So I followed the directions on the website
under the Edit the Registry section but that didn't fix the problem. It's
very annoying. When I open the Control Panel > Folder Option > File Types >
Advanced > Edit File Type window, I can't use the Edit or Remove buttons to
remove the Print Directory Listing in the Actions window because they're
grayed out. I took the word "none" out of the Start > Run > regedit >
(Default) > Value data textbox and I also deleted the Printdir.bat I created
in Notepad. Any help you can offer is appreciated. It's VERY annoying!
--
Sue
Programmer/Data Analyst
Minnesota
And you are asking in this Microsoft Office newsgroup because... ?
Sue wrote:
> Hi. I followed the directions at
> http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;321379 for How to add
> the Print Directory feature for folders in Windows XP. I had problems
> opening shortcuts to other directories in Explore after that -- it would
> start the Search Companion. So I followed the directions on the website
> under the Edit the Registry section but that didn't fix the problem. It's
> very annoying. When I open the Control Panel > Folder Option > File Types >
> Advanced > Edit File Type window, I can't use the Edit or Remove buttons to
> remove the Print Directory Listing in the Actions window because they're
> grayed out. I took the word "none" out of the Start > Run > regedit >
> (Default) > Value data textbox and I also deleted the Printdir.bat I created
> in Notepad. Any help you can offer is appreciated. It's VERY annoying!
Is this not the right place to place a question regarding a MS Office
problem? Since this isn't specific to one application (i.e. Excel, Acess,
Word, etc.), I thought this was the best place to send my question.
--
Sue
Programmer/Data Analyst
Minnesota
"garfield-n-odie [MVP]" wrote:
> And you are asking in this Microsoft Office newsgroup because... ?
>
> Sue wrote:
>
> > Hi. I followed the directions at
> > http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;321379 for How to add
> > the Print Directory feature for folders in Windows XP. I had problems
> > opening shortcuts to other directories in Explore after that -- it would
> > start the Search Companion. So I followed the directions on the website
> > under the Edit the Registry section but that didn't fix the problem. It's
> > very annoying. When I open the Control Panel > Folder Option > File Types >
> > Advanced > Edit File Type window, I can't use the Edit or Remove buttons to
> > remove the Print Directory Listing in the Actions window because they're
> > grayed out. I took the word "none" out of the Start > Run > regedit >
> > (Default) > Value data textbox and I also deleted the Printdir.bat I created
> > in Notepad. Any help you can offer is appreciated. It's VERY annoying!
>
>
It's not an Office question. You are asking about file associations, opening
programs, and print directory. None of these issues relate to any Office
programs. Try a windows newsgroup.
"Sue" <Sue@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:4B7B32BD-7306-4867-A878-342C643EAA1E@microsoft.com...
> Is this not the right place to place a question regarding a MS Office
> problem? Since this isn't specific to one application (i.e. Excel, Acess,
> Word, etc.), I thought this was the best place to send my question.
> --
> Sue
> Programmer/Data Analyst
> Minnesota
>
>
> "garfield-n-odie [MVP]" wrote:
>
>> And you are asking in this Microsoft Office newsgroup because... ?
>>
>> Sue wrote:
>>
>> > Hi. I followed the directions at
>> > http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;321379 for How
>> > to add
>> > the Print Directory feature for folders in Windows XP. I had problems
>> > opening shortcuts to other directories in Explore after that -- it
>> > would
>> > start the Search Companion. So I followed the directions on the
>> > website
>> > under the Edit the Registry section but that didn't fix the problem.
>> > It's
>> > very annoying. When I open the Control Panel > Folder Option > File
>> > Types >
>> > Advanced > Edit File Type window, I can't use the Edit or Remove
>> > buttons to
>> > remove the Print Directory Listing in the Actions window because
>> > they're
>> > grayed out. I took the word "none" out of the Start > Run > regedit >
>> > (Default) > Value data textbox and I also deleted the Printdir.bat I
>> > created
>> > in Notepad. Any help you can offer is appreciated. It's VERY
>> > annoying!
>>
>>
"Sue" <Sue@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote...
>Hi. I followed the directions at
>http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;321379 for How to
>add
>the Print Directory feature for folders in Windows XP. . . .
Another "Knowledge"-Base classic!
In the middle section of the instructions, the Control Panel part, change
instruction # 5 to
5. In the Application used to perform action box, type:
cmd.exe /c printdir.bat
You'd think someone in Microsoft would test these things before making them
public, wouldn't you?
> . . . I had problems
>opening shortcuts to other directories in Explore after that -- it would
>start the Search Companion. So I followed the directions on the website
>under the Edit the Registry section but that didn't fix the problem. It's
>very annoying. When I open the Control Panel > Folder Option > File Types
> >
>Advanced > Edit File Type window, I can't use the Edit or Remove buttons to
>remove the Print Directory Listing in the Actions window because they're
>grayed out. I took the word "none" out of the Start > Run > regedit >
>(Default) > Value data textbox and I also deleted the Printdir.bat I
>created
>in Notepad. Any help you can offer is appreciated. It's VERY annoying!
You may need to delete the Print Directory Listing entry using REGEDIT to
delete the HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\shell\Print_Directory_ Listing key.
Make the Default value for the HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\shell key none.
Then go through the instructions for the Control Panel section again, MAKING
SURE TO FOLLOW THE REVISED # 5 INSTRUCTIONS ABOVE.
Technically speaking, this is a Windows issue, even if you wanted to use
this command to print directory listings for directories that contain only
Office documents. You'd be better off asking questions like this in Windows
newsgroups, which UNHELPFULLY aren't easy to navigate to from Office
newsgroups using Microsofts execrable web portal.
Don't be put off by the win2000 in its name. It's the only newsgroup
available through MSFT's web portal frequented by people who know how to
write and diagnose batch files and related issues.
Ok. Thanks, JoAnn.
--
Sue
Programmer/Data Analyst
Minnesota
"JoAnn Paules" wrote:
> It's not an Office question. You are asking about file associations, opening
> programs, and print directory. None of these issues relate to any Office
> programs. Try a windows newsgroup.
>
> --
>
> JoAnn Paules
> Microsoft MVP - Publisher
>
> How to ask a question
> http://support.microsoft.com/kb/555375
I didin't even know there was a Windows newsgroup!
--
Sue
Programmer/Data Analyst
Minnesota
"Harlan Grove" wrote:
> Another "Knowledge"-Base classic!
>
> In the middle section of the instructions, the Control Panel part, change
> instruction # 5 to
>
> 5. In the Application used to perform action box, type:
>
> cmd.exe /c printdir.bat
>
> You'd think someone in Microsoft would test these things before making them
> public, wouldn't you?
> You may need to delete the Print Directory Listing entry using REGEDIT to
> delete the HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\shell\Print_Directory_ Listing key.
> Make the Default value for the HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\shell key none.
> Then go through the instructions for the Control Panel section again, MAKING
> SURE TO FOLLOW THE REVISED # 5 INSTRUCTIONS ABOVE.
>
> Technically speaking, this is a Windows issue, even if you wanted to use
> this command to print directory listings for directories that contain only
> Office documents. You'd be better off asking questions like this in Windows
> newsgroups, which UNHELPFULLY aren't easy to navigate to from Office
> newsgroups using Microsofts execrable web portal.
>
> Next time, try using
>
> http://www.microsoft.com/communities...mdprompt.admin
>
> Don't be put off by the win2000 in its name. It's the only newsgroup
> available through MSFT's web portal frequented by people who know how to
> write and diagnose batch files and related issues.