

Below are the default permissions for Notepad.exe, you’ll notice administrators are only allowed to read and execute the file while TrustedInstaller has full control. To give yourself full control over the file or folder and stop a potential “You need permission to perform this action” message you must first take ownership from the current owner and then give yourself permission to read, execute or modify it. As an example, TrustedInstaller owns Notepad.exe so even an administrator cannot delete or move the file and will receive a “File Access Denied” error. If TrustedInstaller is the owner of an object with full control over it, an administrator cannot do anything without transferring control to the administrators group, whether the file is locked and in use or not.
#Filetools crashed desktop win 10 windows#
But Windows doesn’t work like that and there are additional levels of access and security that go over and above even what an administrator can do.įor instance, TrustedInstaller is an account created by Windows that has exclusive control over a number of system files and folders. A standard user account has some restrictions while an administrator should have pretty much complete control over the whole system. The target object is not part of the same truss system, it could be that it isn't correctly connected to the truss, or that the trusses are not part of the same system for example connected by a grapple (which is not supported by Braceworks), truss cross or a drop.Most Windows users would know that there are two main types of user account for individuals, a standard user account and an administrator account. The wrong mode of the cable tool is used, if schematic distributor mode is used then the cable will not follow a truss line automatically Incorrectly created or corrupted truss symbols, if the truss hasn't been correctly set up to begin with or has somehow lost the data needed by auto-connect then cable will not follow the truss line automatically. The magnets define the auto-connect behavior which is also used for drawing cables.

Truss symbols from earlier versions of Spotlight that do not have the new magnets in them. The main potential issues when tying to get cables to follow trusses automatically are, Would appreciate if anyone has any experience of this and how they may have solved it. Not sure whether this is a bug, or whether theres just some problematic item in my file that is breaking things.Īlso, I'm finding that the cable wont follow the truss properly, but I think I have read on other posts relating to the cable path tool that often truss created in older versions of VW doesn't behave very well with the cable path tool. For example, there is a 63/3 that starts SR and follows the single path all the way to the racks and that didn't cause an issue. Sometimes, running a cable using only one cable path crashes VW, but usually it is fine.

Start a cable (socapex) at the racks under the seating rake, drop onto the cable path that drops from the roof onto the lighting truss (text indicating this location), end it nearby. When I click to complete the cable, crashes. Start a cable run (32/1 type) where I have placed text on stage left, run round to where the cable paths join USC, attach to main cable route that goes over the roof and drops down behind the seating rake to racks that are underneath it. I have done the following, which always results in VW crashing: I've attached a file that contains just the cable paths that I copied out of my working file, which still shows the crashing behaviour. However, all the cable paths and cable I used I put in today myself, not using any parts imported into the file from anywhere else. I'm not sure if having several cable paths that are consecutive is the best way to use the tool, but doing this in a new file worked fine with no issues, so I suspect there is a corrupt part of my existing file, which was made years ago and has come up through several versions of VW. Loving the tool, but not the crashing part! and found VW crashing very often, when I was ending a cable run that utilised several cable paths consecutively. I've been playing around with the cable tool today to calculate cable run lengths etc.
