Stella740pl
Programmer
Hello, everyone!
Haven't been here in a while and glad to find this forum alive, well and active.
Here at work, I have recently received a new machine with Win10, and still need to use VFP6 (it's the only one we have) for some mission-critical legacy applications. I installed it several times, with the same result. After the files copied over, the installer shows "Updating your system" screen, and then becomes unresponsive (I tried to wait for up to 45 minutes to see if it still doing something; should I try to wait any longer?). The only way to finish it is to force close. After that, Control Panel doesn't show Visual Studio or VFP in the list of installed programs (to properly uninstall it), but the folders with all the files are there and seem to be working.
The problem I have is that each time VFP starts, it throws "Ole Error Code 0x8002801d: Library Not Registered" error, then Welcome screen (even if it was checked to not show again the previous time). When I close both of these, it works normally (at least the simple things that I tried). I googeld, and the most helpful tip I found was to run RegSvr32 with full name and path of the library in question - but I don't know what library that is, as the error message doesn't provide it. Another tip was to find and register VFP6ENU.DLL, which I tried, and got the following message from RegSvr32: "The module "C:\...\VFP6ENU.DLL" was loaded, but the entry-point DLLRegisterServer was not found. Make sure that "C:\...\VFP6ENU.DLL" is a valid DLL or OCX and then try again."
I can probably live with having to press two extra keys every time it starts, to close error message and then the Welcome screen, but it is annoying. Besides, I am not sure what else may not work properly at some point because of this.
Up until now, I have been using VFP6 on Win7 for years, without major problems, even though it did throw some errors during installation, if I remember correctly, and once in a while an internal consistency error.
If someone knows how to fix this, please share.
Thank you,
Stella
Haven't been here in a while and glad to find this forum alive, well and active.
Here at work, I have recently received a new machine with Win10, and still need to use VFP6 (it's the only one we have) for some mission-critical legacy applications. I installed it several times, with the same result. After the files copied over, the installer shows "Updating your system" screen, and then becomes unresponsive (I tried to wait for up to 45 minutes to see if it still doing something; should I try to wait any longer?). The only way to finish it is to force close. After that, Control Panel doesn't show Visual Studio or VFP in the list of installed programs (to properly uninstall it), but the folders with all the files are there and seem to be working.
The problem I have is that each time VFP starts, it throws "Ole Error Code 0x8002801d: Library Not Registered" error, then Welcome screen (even if it was checked to not show again the previous time). When I close both of these, it works normally (at least the simple things that I tried). I googeld, and the most helpful tip I found was to run RegSvr32 with full name and path of the library in question - but I don't know what library that is, as the error message doesn't provide it. Another tip was to find and register VFP6ENU.DLL, which I tried, and got the following message from RegSvr32: "The module "C:\...\VFP6ENU.DLL" was loaded, but the entry-point DLLRegisterServer was not found. Make sure that "C:\...\VFP6ENU.DLL" is a valid DLL or OCX and then try again."
I can probably live with having to press two extra keys every time it starts, to close error message and then the Welcome screen, but it is annoying. Besides, I am not sure what else may not work properly at some point because of this.
Up until now, I have been using VFP6 on Win7 for years, without major problems, even though it did throw some errors during installation, if I remember correctly, and once in a while an internal consistency error.
If someone knows how to fix this, please share.
Thank you,
Stella