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Q: HOW CAN I remove the right-click context-menu options that remain long after the program that added them has itself been uninstalled? Carmelo Failla A: Uninstalling a program should remove all the changes it made to Windows, but sometimes to get rid of the context-menu options an uninstalled program leaves behind, you have to edit the Registry. First, back up the Registry. Now select StartòRun, type regedit, and press <Enter>. Find HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\*\shellex\ContextMenuHandlers in the Registry Editor's left pane. Click the plus sign (+) next to 'ContextMenuHandlers' to see keys resembling Windows Explorer folders for every program that has options in the context menu. Then select the key for the program that you thought you uninstalled. Double-click the (Default) value in the right pane to bring up an editing box that has the Value data field highlighted. Press <Ctrl>-C to copy this string to the Clipboard. Then press <Esc>. Right-click the open key in the left pane and select Delete, then Yes. Press <Ctrl>-F to start a search. With the cursor in the 'Find what' field, press <Ctrl>-V to insert the numbers that you copied from the Value data field. Uncheck the Values and Data fields and click Find Next. The search should stop at a key inside HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID. In the right pane, the default value's data should describe the program. Press <Delete> and then select Yes. You should never see the dearly departed program's menu option again. - Lincoln Spector |
Category:Windows 9x Issue: January 2001 |
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