#INPAGE URDU PROFESSIONAL 3.XX WINDOWS#So what do you do when you get an error message that references appcompat.txt? In my opinion, a) allow Windows to report the error to Microsoft, if it asks you to, and b) forget about appcompat.txt. Unless you’re technical enough to understand what’s inside of it, it will not help you. It contains information about the problem. I point it out here, simply to drive home the point:Īppcompat.txt is not the problem. It’s meant for the engineers back at Microsoft to use to analyze failures and hopefully provide fixes over time. Note: It’s not meant for you to understand this. You’ll see a lot of technical information that begins with this: įollowed by information about the program that was running at the time an error occurred. Where “C:DOCUME~1usernameLOCALS~” is replaced with the actual information that was presented in the error message. So click on Start, Run and enter:Ĭ:DOCUME~1usernameLOCALS~ When you get an error message that references appcompat.txt, it’ll usually give you the full path to the file. Open it up in Notepad and you’ll see what I mean. Appcompat.txt is a file that is uploaded if you say yes.Īppcompat.txt is not the problem. You’ve seen the message asking you if you would like to report this error to Microsoft. txt is simply a reporting file used when uploading error reports to Microsoft. Appcompat.txt is not the problem, it’s not the error, and it’s not the cause of the error … it’s information about the error.Īppcompat. Read the error message carefully and you’ll see what I mean. I can hear a crowd of people saying, “Yes it is! It’s right there in this error message!” That’s what I mean by Windows being obscure. You see (and I’ll say this several times), appcompat.txt is not the problem. This is another case of Windows being particularly obscure.
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