Error Creating System Registry
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Error Creating Registry Key For Appname =
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Error Creating Value Error Writing To The Registry
Win8 up vote 0 down vote favorite 1 On Windows 8, the following raises error. CoInitializeEx(nil, COINIT_APARTMENTTHREADED or COINIT_SPEED_OVER_MEMORY); // or simply CoInitialize(nil); gives the same error However, if application runs as 'Administrator', it is working fine. On Windows 7, there is no such problem. The application is built using Delphi XE3, (32-bit). Any solution to get rid of this? First chance exception at $76AA4B32. Exception error creating registry key fifa 10 class EOleRegistrationError with message 'Error creating system registry entry'. Process RPM.exe (4584) delphi share|improve this question edited Jun 29 '13 at 18:48 asked Jun 29 '13 at 18:42 SteakOverCooked 1,5281232 What is the error? –David Heffernan Jun 29 '13 at 18:44 It would be extremely helpful if you told us what the error was it raised. I can't quite read your screen from where I'm sitting. –Ken White Jun 29 '13 at 18:45 1 Note that COINIT_SPEED_OVER_MEMORY does nothing at all: blogs.msdn.com/b/oldnewthing/archive/2012/11/08/10366704.aspx –David Heffernan Jun 29 '13 at 18:45 re-edited. It also raises exception if i use CoInitialize(nil); –SteakOverCooked Jun 29 '13 at 18:47 add a comment| 1 Answer 1 active oldest votes up vote 4 down vote accepted The error that you report in the question is not thrown by a call to CoInitialize. The error that you report is a Delphi exception and CoInitialize is a Windows API call. A call to CoInitialize will not raise a Delphi exception. The EOleRegistrationError is thrown by TComObjectFactory.UpdateRegistry. And that method is called when you are attempting to register (or unregister) a COM server. Which is something that requires administrator rights be
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Error Creating Registry Key Code 5
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Cannot Create Value Error Writing To The Registry Windows 7
with us Super User Questions Tags Users Badges Unanswered Ask Question _ Super User is a question and answer site for cannot create key error writing to the registry windows 10 computer enthusiasts and power users. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise http://stackoverflow.com/questions/17383565/error-creating-system-register-entry-error-on-win8 to the top Cannot Create Key: Error Writing to the Windows 7 Registry up vote 1 down vote favorite I have Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit. Things were going well until I had to install Outlook 2007 and Visio 2007 on my machine for some client work. After that Microsoft Office 2007 started trying to reconfigure itself every time i was launched. After some uninstalls, registry cleaning, re-installs, and various http://superuser.com/questions/185323/cannot-create-key-error-writing-to-the-windows-7-registry other experimental changes I was able to correct the "Configure" issue [for all programs except Visio and I'm willing to accept that]. However, during the process I lost the ability to do "File-->New-->Word Document" and "File--> New-->Excel Document", etc.. I tried repairing Office, but that did not add the menu items back in. After some searching it appears this issue can be fixed by adding registry keys, as described here. Unfortunately I am unable to add those registry keys. The reg files from the link give an error: "Error Accessing Registry". I opened up RegEdit and try to add the keys manually, I get get the error "Cannot Create Key: Error Writing to the Registry." I have also tried some programs such as Creative Elements Power Tools and FileTypesMan to address this issue, but neither one was able to solve it. I didn't get any errors from those tools, but it did not add items back into the "new" menu. For the most part my experiments have been with trying to get excel in the file new menu, but long term I want to get them all back there. I am running regedit as an administrator. I have re-assigned ownership of the key in question to the ad
mistake on Windows Vista, but even so I had a hard time finding the solution on Google so I thought I'd post about it. When I was trying to add a key in the Registry Editor, regedit.exe, I http://blog.tjitjing.com/index.php/2007/02/regedit-cannot-create-value-error.html got an error message saying "Cannot create value: Error writing to the registry."I have never http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_7-performance/error-creating-registry-key-code-5/ba4d24b0-413e-4c38-9dcb-3a0463cf8684 seen this on XP (but then again I don't edit the registry that often), but since this is Vista with UAC (User Account Control) I thought it might have to do with permissions so I tried to run regedit.exe as Administrator but to no avail. Finally I figured out that I did not have the right permissions in the registry tree.The solution is error creating simply to right click on the folder and select Permissions. You may not even have the right to change the permissions, if this is the case then first you have to take ownership - click Advanced and then the Owner tab. Funny thing about my folder is that the owner was a group called "TrustedInstaller". After I had taken ownership, I wanted to change it back to the "TrustedInstaller" group but it was nowhere to be found. Apparently you error creating registry can't change it back - it is not a group but a service and part of Windows Resource Protection (WRP) as noted by Richard Civil and others in this TechNet post. Two other useful newbie things I found out - thanks to this post by Tim Sneath of Microsoft - when trying to figure out how to run a regedit.exe as Administrator in Vista was this: Run from the XP Start menu is now replaced with Start Search bar in Vista. Simply type regedit.exe (or cmd.exe etc.) in the search bar and hit Enter and it will run. To run an application with Administrator privileges using this method, instead of hitting Enter you hit Ctrl+Shift+Enter. 19 Comments (Click here to add your comment!) Anonymous Mar 26, 2007 @ 09:10:00 Thank you very much for the explanation. It was very useful. xplorer_ex May 22, 2007 @ 14:02:00 Hello there, i did everything in the tut, but im still having the same error appearing, the registry path is HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\HARDWARE\DEVICEMAP\Scsi\ It works in most other paths, just not this one 🙁 Im using Vista Ultimate Help would be appreciated! ThanksXp10r3r_3X Anonymous Jul 12, 2007 @ 19:03:00 Thanks for the bit about restarting Outlook after setting securities on Macros. I guess I'm so used to Outlook telling me when it needs to restart that it didn't occur to me there would be a case where it wouldn't tell me.
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