Comments
Sort by recent activity
There are a few exception reports coming in about this, but I really need to know where sn.exe is located on machines with this problem. Please let me know if you get this issue.
Thanks, / comments
There are a few exception reports coming in about this, but I really need to know where sn.exe is located on machines with this problem. Please let me know if you get this issue.
Thanks,
Thanks for the report, and those details of your setup are really useful. We'll try to reproduce it, I'll let you know if we can.
Thanks, / comments
Thanks for the report, and those details of your setup are really useful. We'll try to reproduce it, I'll let you know if we can.
Thanks,
Could you check whether you have a copy of sn.exe anywhere on your hard drive, and let me know exactly where if you do?
I expect there's one in a folder something like:
C:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v6.0A\BinThanks, / comments
Could you check whether you have a copy of sn.exe anywhere on your hard drive, and let me know exactly where if you do?
I expect there's one in a folder something like:
C:\Program Files\Microsoft S...
http://translate.google.com/translate?j ... n&tl=zh-CN / comments
http://translate.google.com/translate?j ... n&tl=zh-CN
Ah, I understand what I've done. It was while trying to make alt correctly open the file menu (which it's never done). I'll get it fixed soon.
Cheers, / comments
Ah, I understand what I've done. It was while trying to make alt correctly open the file menu (which it's never done). I'll get it fixed soon.
Cheers,
Does anyone else see this happening?
I think this may be fixed in the new build, give it a try.
Thanks, / comments
Does anyone else see this happening?
I think this may be fixed in the new build, give it a try.
Thanks,
Mm, I was worried the interaction was a bit odd at the time, but my intention was that you can either increase the window, or decrease the assembly name column, to get the path column bigger. I wanted to avoid scrollbars ever coming up.
How do you think it should behave?
Thanks, / comments
Mm, I was worried the interaction was a bit odd at the time, but my intention was that you can either increase the window, or decrease the assembly name column, to get the path column bigger. I wan...
Hi Stefan,
I thought about that when I was putting that in.
There is another way to start an executable, by making a dummy project, and configuring it's debug tab to start something up (in which case of course you have full control ove command line parameters). I just added the Debug an Executable option as a shortcut for the mainline case.
I'm worried adding an extra prompt would slow the process down for more people than would be helped.
Perhaps we can give some tip to use the dummy project method somehow?
What do you think?
A / comments
Hi Stefan,
I thought about that when I was putting that in.
There is another way to start an executable, by making a dummy project, and configuring it's debug tab to start something up (in which ca...
Hi jezekjkr,
Thanks for the report. I'll try to reproduce the problem.
Does it add a new menu each time you open reflector standalone? Or each time you open visual studio?
Do all the menus work, or just one of them?
I assume this is VS2010 Beta 2?
Thanks! / comments
Hi jezekjkr,
Thanks for the report. I'll try to reproduce the problem.
Does it add a new menu each time you open reflector standalone? Or each time you open visual studio?
Do all the menus work, or...
The crash reports contain some of the state of the program when it crashed. This is usually completely anonymous, but for some crashes it can contain maybe the location of your temp directory, which can contain your user name.
Obviously we have access to your IP address because you're connecting to our server [image]
I'm afraid there's no way to review it because it's actually pretty unintelligable until our obfuscator has un-obfuscated it.
See www.smartassembly.com for more details about the exception reporting technology.
Cheers, / comments
The crash reports contain some of the state of the program when it crashed. This is usually completely anonymous, but for some crashes it can contain maybe the location of your temp directory, whic...