Henry
Sat Mar 15 21:17:37 PDT 2008
Thanks,
I'm totally stumped too. The kb article tells how to set such things as if
you want an animated character etc.
It doesn't address my problem though.
If I know which files to replace, I'd copy new ones over top. I _think_ the
search is a function of Explorer.exe, woulod you know anything about what
files actually are the executable for the search function?
Regards,
Henry
"Byte" <Byte@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:C1355C87-5E73-4F98-96F8-3F66BE02E09B@microsoft.com...
> It is possible that your Search companion is corrupt for it not saving
> the changes in your settings. But, take a look at the below info, it
> may be of some help, for you've got me stumped from this location.
> How To Configure the Search Companion in Windows XP
>
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/307980
>
> --
> XP - WNP
> Today is the first day of the
> rest of your life.
>
>
>
> "Henry Horrocks - 108943" wrote:
>
>> Thanks for the reply. Possibly I was unclear.
>>
>> The problem is: after I get the columns set up the way I want them,
>> (filename, size, type, folder, and date modified) the next time a search
>> is
>> made, the Relevance column returns and is stuck in the middle, and the
>> date
>> modified column is not there. It's as though the search program -
>> whatever
>> it is actually called, is not writing back the changes, and the old
>> layout
>> including the unwanted column returns.
>>
>> Its's kind of like if the read-only bit were set on the (whatever) file,
>> and
>> it won't save the column changes.
>>
>> On my laptop, the behavior is correct. If I change the columns, it
>> remembers the order and width and column headers, so the next time I do a
>> search it's the way I want it. The desktop machine, however, won't
>> remember
>> the settings.
>>
>> Is there a .ini file associated with searching? Is it a registry key
>> that
>> determines which columns will display?
>>
>> Any ideas?
>>
>> Henry
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> "Byte" <Byte@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
>> news:171639E2-2EFD-40A2-B1E3-6ACD4B6603D0@microsoft.com...
>> > You have the choice for up to about 40 columns. How many do have
>> > checked?
>> > Clicking the "relevance" will diminish your settings due to screen
>> > resolution/pixels.
>> > In other words, you're trying to put 10 pounds of sh.. in a 5 pound
>> > box.
>> > Or change your DPI in Display settings from 96DPI to about 60 (very
>> > unwise).
>> > Otherwise, on your next search it will revert to default. Maybe a
>> > larger
>> > monitor?
>> >
>> > --
>> > XP - WNP
>> > Today is the first day of the
>> > rest of your life.
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > "Henry Horrocks - 108943" wrote:
>> >
>> >> When I do a search for files, the column order is not as I would like.
>> >> The
>> >> column "relevance" is displayed, and the column "date modified" is not
>> >> displayed.
>> >>
>> >> I KNOW how I'm _supposed_ to control this feature - right clicking on
>> >> the
>> >> column headers brings up a dialog box allowing me to set which columns
>> >> are
>> >> displayed, the width and the order. Like I say, that much works OK.
>> >> Ans
>> >> when I change the order it works UNTIL I DO A NEW SEARCH AND THEN IT
>> >> REVERTS
>> >> BACK TO THE UNWANTED ORDER.
>> >>
>> >> Problem is, the column order won't stick (or keep it's settings) the
>> >> next
>> >> time I do a search, the incorrect colums appear. It's as though the
>> >> settings are not retained between searches.
>> >>
>> >> This behavior is not present on my laptop, and I believe it's a
>> >> problem
>> >> with
>> >> a file on my desktop. Does anyone know where XP might store these
>> >> "search
>> >> results" column settings from session to session?
>> >>
>> >> Is it a registry entry? .INI file?
>> >>
>> >> Anyone know how to make these column settings stick?
>> >>
>> >> Thanks
>> >>
>> >> Henry
>> >>
>> >> Windows XP Sp2. Rather normal system, no weird Anti-virus or unknown
>> >> TSR's,
>> >> plenty of memory. I check to make sure no illegal processes are
>> >> running.
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>>
>>
>>