Solving a Puzzling XP Issue: Discovering Where List Order is Stored

  • Thread starter Thread starter NoTime
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    List
AI Thread Summary
In Windows XP, the order of commands in the right-click Start menu can be altered, leading to issues such as "Search" appearing at the top instead of "Open." This change is likely related to registry settings rather than the Start menu itself, as drag-and-drop functionality does not apply to the right-click properties. Users suspect that a registry edit may have caused this shift, although the exact method is unclear. A suggested solution involves using the command "regsvr32 /i shell32.dll," which refreshes the registry information for the specified DLL and can restore the correct order of commands in the Start menu.
NoTime
Science Advisor
Homework Helper
Messages
1,583
Reaction score
0
XP is something I've studiously avoided.

I have a neighbor with a question though.

Normally when you right click the Start button the "Open" command is at the top of the popup list.
In this case the order has somehow shifted and now the "Search" command is at the top of the list.
This causes anoying issues.

Where is this list order stored in XP?
 
Computer science news on Phys.org
You should be able to just drag items in the Start menu to reorganize them any way you'd like.

- Warren
 
chroot said:
You should be able to just drag items in the Start menu to reorganize them any way you'd like.

- Warren
Tried that.
It's not the start menu itself. Drag/drop work much like NT/2000 there.

It's the right click properties associated with the start button. These items don't drag.

It seems that the topmost item in the list is the default double_click action. In this case "Search" rather than "Open" is now at the top of the properties list. If you douple click something you get the windows explorer file search window.

I would guess this is a registry edit, but he has no idea how he did it (if he did it).
 
NoTime said:
Tried that.
It's not the start menu itself. Drag/drop work much like NT/2000 there.

It's the right click properties associated with the start button. These items don't drag.

It seems that the topmost item in the list is the default double_click action. In this case "Search" rather than "Open" is now at the top of the properties list. If you douple click something you get the windows explorer file search window.

I would guess this is a registry edit, but he has no idea how he did it (if he did it).

check this link
http://www.onecomputerguy.com/windowsxp_tips.htm#open_folder
or this one
http://blogs.chron.com/helpline/archives/2005/10/double-click_op.html

post here if it doesn't work :D
 
bloodasp said:
check this link
http://www.onecomputerguy.com/windowsxp_tips.htm#open_folder
or this one
http://blogs.chron.com/helpline/archives/2005/10/double-click_op.html

post here if it doesn't work :D
Thanks:smile:
I used the regsvr32 /i shell32.dll command sugested in the 2nd site rather than doing the regedit bit.
This command has the effect of refreshing all the registry info for the specified dll.
Did the trick.
Works fine now.
 
Thread 'Urgent: Physically repair - or bypass - power button on Asus laptop'
Asus Vivobook S14 flip. The power button is wrecked. Unable to turn it on AT ALL. We can get into how and why it got wrecked later, but suffice to say a kitchen knife was involved: These buttons do want to NOT come off, not like other lappies, where they can snap in and out. And they sure don't go back on. So, in the absence of a longer-term solution that might involve a replacement, is there any way I can activate the power button, like with a paperclip or wire or something? It looks...
I came across a video regarding the use of AI/ML to work through complex datasets to determine complicated protein structures. It is a promising and beneficial use of AI/ML. AlphaFold - The Most Useful Thing AI Has Ever Done https://www.ebi.ac.uk/training/online/courses/alphafold/an-introductory-guide-to-its-strengths-and-limitations/what-is-alphafold/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AlphaFold https://deepmind.google/about/ Edit/update: The AlphaFold article in Nature John Jumper...

Similar threads

Replies
22
Views
4K
Replies
3
Views
3K
Replies
2
Views
9K
2
Replies
67
Views
14K
Replies
13
Views
3K
Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
0
Views
22K
Replies
0
Views
17K
Replies
1
Views
25K
Back
Top