x-Shadow-x Posted September 5, 2008 Posted September 5, 2008 Im sorry if this is in the wrong spot. Im adding an "open with" to the right click menu, its to open photos in photoshop. Im wondering, is there a way that I can link all photos to photoshop with just one registry entry, or im I just dreaming?
sevenalive Posted September 6, 2008 Posted September 6, 2008 There was a way, but not CS3, however on photofiles, you can right click and press edit with photoshop and it will open it.Or you can right click, open with, select photoshop, and check that default box. Do that for each pic file type.Honestly to preview photos or open them for viewing, just use Windows photo gallery, or the vista equivalent.
x-Shadow-x Posted September 6, 2008 Author Posted September 6, 2008 Its ok I found a way, took an hour or two to find in the registry, but it was one registry entry.
jaclaz Posted September 6, 2008 Posted September 6, 2008 Its ok I found a way, took an hour or two to find in the registry, but it was one registry entry. Which you aren't going to share , so that maybe in the future another user may save that hour or two? jaclaz
x-Shadow-x Posted September 8, 2008 Author Posted September 8, 2008 (edited) Ah sorry, I forgot. [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\SystemFileAssociations\image\shell]@="Edit with Photoshop"[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\SystemFileAssociations\image\shell\Edit with Photoshop\command]@="C:\\Program Files\\Adobe\\Adobe Photoshop CS3\\Photoshop.exe" "%1"But of course you can change "Edit with Photoshop" to anything you like. Same with the link. Remember to have double back-slashes and add "%1" to the link. Edited September 8, 2008 by x-Shadow-x
jaclaz Posted September 9, 2008 Posted September 9, 2008 Good. For the record, when we are talking of file association, this can come handy:http://www.xs4all.nl/~wstudios/Associate/WAssociate is FreeWare written for Windows 95, 98, ME, NT, 200 and XP. It manages the associations between file name extensions and file types stored in the Windows registry. These stored file types determine the appearance and actions supported for a file by Windows.jaclaz
x-Shadow-x Posted September 9, 2008 Author Posted September 9, 2008 Sweet, that will come in handy. Thanks.
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