Hi Shenan
Many Thanks, I had so much pain searching for files inside Windows folder,
specially when you are writing a service application and you need to delete
it from system32 folder each time you change it.
I created a registry patch to set these default settings for search,
now I have a few more questions.
How you disabled that blue look of search in XP without unregistring the
dll's?
is it possible to have search options closed and still they are effective
(like what we had in win2k)?
Here I have a picture of what I mean the red arrows show what should change
to blue one
http://picasaweb.google.com/bsarmady/SearchIssue/photo#5202689202259967714
Many Thanks
Bob
and do you have a solution for folder name that shortening in title bar and
also search folder box?
"Shenan Stanley" wrote:
> Bob wrote:
>> I have a problem that still exists after I received the SP3 for XP.
>> I still cannot search for every file and folder. there are few
>> issues that I could not fix by myself yet
>>
>> 1- go to your windows host drive (the drive that you installed
>> windows) search for explorer.exe. After a few seconds or minutes or
>> may be days it will say "Search is complete. There is no result to
>> display". Now goto windows folder and type e, x, p and you are on
>> it, the explorer.exe file. Now go back to root folder and try
>> searching "msmsgs.exe" same answer now go to "\Program
>> Files\Messenger" folder, thats it second file in list!
>>
>> I want to force search to look in every folder including system
>> folders like windows and "program files"
>>
>> I even tried to delete desktop.ini files from these folders but
>> still no success.
>>
>> searchin every folder is usefull when you are searching for a virus
>> running in memory and you can see it in taskmanager and when you
>> search for it you cannot find it except if you search each folder
>> sepratly that it isvery time consuming process.
>>
>> The second problem is with "Look in" combo box that is not
>> containing full path to search folder so you cannot include many
>> selected drives like what was available in windows 2000, I could
>> search drive C and D together using folder name like this C:,D:
>> (i'm not sure may be C:;D: ) but it is not available anymore
>>
>> The other problem is the name on Search folder combo box is not
>> path anymore so I cannot copy the search folder name from there. As
>> an example if you are searching D:\Documents\Media it only shows
>> Media and if you have Media Folder in many Media folder like
>> "C:\Document\1\Media", "C:\Document\2\Media",
>> "C:\Document\3\Media", ... you will not know which one you was
>> searching from the search box
>>
>> fortunatly I managed to get ride of the dog and stupid new search
>> dialog that was showing all files as thumbnails.
>
> Shenan wrote:
>> Search Options --> Advanced Options --> Search system folders,
>> Search hidden files, Search Subfolders are all checked?
>>
>> Truly - it sounds like you have some other issue. Are you sure all
>> you did was install SP3? I just tried it on 3 very differently
>> configured systems that I recentlhy updated to SP3 - none of them
>> had the issues you are reporting. :-(
>
> Bob wrote:
>> Actually this is not an issue of SP3 it was exist from first days
>> of windows XP
>> - yes the options checked and I can see the hidden and system files
>> too.
>> - I'm not using Indexing server that consumes about 5Gigs of my
>> Hard space and also makes finding an small file in a folder of 1500
>> files slower than finding it manually.
>>
>> I also unregistered dll's for the Search dog and new blue look with
>> lot of useless options and it not look like windows 2000 search box
>> that I missed it a lot.
>>
>> from your answer I understand that you can search windows host
>> drive and see the files inside the program files folder and windows
>> folder in your test result, am I right?
>
> I did this:
>
>
>> 1- go to your windows host drive (the drive that you installed
>> windows) search for explorer.exe. After a few seconds or minutes or
>> may be days it will say "Search is complete. There is no result to
>> display". Now goto windows folder and type e, x, p and you are on
>> it, the explorer.exe file.
>
>
> Except that my search for 'explorer.exe' on the system I am using resulted
> in several matches.
>
> - C:\WINDOWS
> - C:\WINDOWS\$NtUninstallKB938828$
> - C:\WINDOWS\Prefetch
> - C:\WINDOWS\system32\dllcache
> - C:\WINDOWS\$hf_mig$\KB938828\SP2QFE
>
> I stopped it there - that was less than 2 minutes into the search (Pentium
> 1.8GHz, 768MB memory). I also turned off indexing long ago. I am unsure
> why you would have unregistered DLLs to get rid of the dog/etc - that's
> easily done without touching the registry/any files. It is - in fact -
> options available to be turned off/on. If you unregistered DLLs - you may
> have broken your search.
>
> This is my search for explorer.exe:
> http://picasaweb.google.com/newshelper/WindowsSearchSimplifiedInterface/photo#5200441491329093970
>
> This is how my Search looks in Windows XP:
> http://picasaweb.google.com/newshelper/WindowsSearchSimplifiedInterface/photo#5200440396112433474
>
> Not sure if having the 'worthless options' you see there bothers me. ;-)
>
> --
> Shenan Stanley
> MS-MVP
> --
> How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
> http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
>
>
>