Reset Preferences File

B
Posted By
Bobby77501
Dec 5, 2003
Views
465
Replies
9
Status
Closed
When I hold down Ctl>Alt>Shift while starting PS CS, I’m supposed to be asked if I want to delete the Preferences file. But I’m not asked the question.

1. Where can I find the preferences file so I can delete it manually?
2. The reason I want to do this is because the percentage in the lower left
corner of the PS window doesn’t work. I key in a percentage different from what is showing and that percentage shows – but hitting Enter does not implement that new percenatge, Instead, it freezes the file I’m working on.

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F
Flycaster
Dec 5, 2003
"Bobby77501" wrote in message
When I hold down Ctl>Alt>Shift while starting PS CS, I’m supposed to be asked if I want to delete the Preferences file. But I’m not asked the question.

1. Where can I find the preferences file so I can delete it manually?
2. The reason I want to do this is because the percentage in the lower
left
corner of the PS window doesn’t work. I key in a percentage different
from
what is showing and that percentage shows – but hitting Enter does not implement that new percenatge, Instead, it freezes the file I’m working
on.

Press Control-Alt-Shift immediately *after* you start launching Photoshop. You’ll be asked if you want to delete the "Adobe Photoshop Settings File." This will, however, dump *all* settings, including a buggy prefs file.

If you just want to dump the prefs: (using My Computer) go C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Application Data\Adobe\Photoshop\8.0\Adobe Photoshop CS Settings\Adobe Photoshop CS Prefs.psp.

FWIW, dumping the prefs file should be considered a monthly housekeeping chore.

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JW
JP White
Dec 5, 2003
Flycaster wrote:

FWIW, dumping the prefs file should be considered a monthly housekeeping chore.

What do you you ‘lose’ when you delete the preferences? Does it take much to recreate your ideal layout and settings?

JP
F
Flycaster
Dec 5, 2003
"JP White" wrote in message
Flycaster wrote:

FWIW, dumping the prefs file should be considered a monthly housekeeping chore.

What do you you ‘lose’ when you delete the preferences? Does it take much to recreate your ideal layout and settings?

This explains it better than I can (at least in a reasonable amount of time): http://www.creativepro.com/story/feature/17478.html?origin=s tory

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B
Bobby77501
Dec 5, 2003
I am pressing Ctl>Alt>Shift immediately after I start to launch Photoshop. I’ve tried just pressing and releasing right after I start – and holding it down until PS is fully loaded . I never get the request asking if I want to delete the "Adobe PhotoshopSettings File." But I do get the window asking me where I want my scratch disk.

"Flycaster" wrote in message
"Bobby77501" wrote in message
When I hold down Ctl>Alt>Shift while starting PS CS, I’m supposed to be asked if I want to delete the Preferences file. But I’m not asked the question.

1. Where can I find the preferences file so I can delete it manually?
2. The reason I want to do this is because the percentage in the lower
left
corner of the PS window doesn’t work. I key in a percentage different
from
what is showing and that percentage shows – but hitting Enter does not implement that new percenatge, Instead, it freezes the file I’m working
on.

Press Control-Alt-Shift immediately *after* you start launching
Photoshop.
You’ll be asked if you want to delete the "Adobe Photoshop Settings File." This will, however, dump *all* settings, including a buggy prefs file.
If you just want to dump the prefs: (using My Computer) go C:\Documents
and
Settings\<username>\Application Data\Adobe\Photoshop\8.0\Adobe Photoshop
CS
Settings\Adobe Photoshop CS Prefs.psp.

FWIW, dumping the prefs file should be considered a monthly housekeeping chore.

—–= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =—– http://www.newsfeeds.com – The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! —–== Over 100,000 Newsgroups – 19 Different Servers! =—–
F
Flycaster
Dec 5, 2003
"Bobby77501" wrote in message
I am pressing Ctl>Alt>Shift immediately after I start to launch Photoshop. I’ve tried just pressing and releasing right after I start – and holding
it
down until PS is fully loaded . I never get the request asking if I want
to
delete the "Adobe PhotoshopSettings File." But I do get the window asking me where I want my scratch disk.

Then delete it manually, per the instructions given for XP. If the prefs reset does not solve your problems, then another uninstall/reload would be in order. If you’re keeping 7.1 on your system, just let CS install where it wants to this time.

—–= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =—– http://www.newsfeeds.com – The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! —–== Over 100,000 Newsgroups – 19 Different Servers! =—–
B
Bobby77501
Dec 5, 2003
Thanks – but "been there, done that." I probably should find out how to completely uninstall all of my Photoshop apps – then just reinstall CS. Would you know how to do this – including the registry entries?

Thanks…….

"Flycaster" wrote in message
"Bobby77501" wrote in message
I am pressing Ctl>Alt>Shift immediately after I start to launch
Photoshop.
I’ve tried just pressing and releasing right after I start – and holding
it
down until PS is fully loaded . I never get the request asking if I
want
to
delete the "Adobe PhotoshopSettings File." But I do get the window
asking
me where I want my scratch disk.

Then delete it manually, per the instructions given for XP. If the prefs reset does not solve your problems, then another uninstall/reload would be in order. If you’re keeping 7.1 on your system, just let CS install where it wants to this time.

—–= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =—– http://www.newsfeeds.com – The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! —–== Over 100,000 Newsgroups – 19 Different Servers! =—–
F
Fred
Dec 5, 2003
Bobby77501 wrote:

When I hold down Ctl>Alt>Shift while starting PS CS, I’m supposed to be asked if I want to delete the Preferences file. But I’m not asked the question.

1. Where can I find the preferences file so I can delete it manually?

On Win NT-style systems it’s somewhere under
C:\…\YourUsername\…\adobe\photoshop

2. The reason I want to do this is because the percentage in the lower left corner of the PS window doesn’t work. I key in a percentage different from what is showing and that percentage shows – but hitting Enter does not implement that new percenatge, Instead, it freezes the file I’m working on.

Well, it shouldn’t freeze, but anyway I have probably never used that control for zooming in/out.

Instead, use [Ctrl] and [+] or [Ctrl] and [-].

Add [Alt] to either do or do not resize the image window along with the image while zooming.

BTW there is a ‘Navigator’ palette with a slider, too.

Fred


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JW
JP White
Dec 6, 2003
Flycaster wrote:
"JP White" wrote in message

Flycaster wrote:

FWIW, dumping the prefs file should be considered a monthly housekeeping chore.

What do you you ‘lose’ when you delete the preferences? Does it take much to recreate your ideal layout and settings?

This explains it better than I can (at least in a reasonable amount of time): http://www.creativepro.com/story/feature/17478.html?origin=s tory

That’s a great link, thanks very much, it’s bookmarked!!

JP
F
Flycaster
Dec 7, 2003
"Bobby77501" wrote in message
Thanks – but "been there, done that." I probably should find out how to completely uninstall all of my Photoshop apps – then just reinstall CS. Would you know how to do this – including the registry entries?

Frankly, the only sane way to deal with a buggered registry is to back up your data files to a CD or other off-computer backup device, wipe the disk, and do a CLEAN reinstall of XP and your apps. If you have a bunch of crap software in that box, you’ll be amazed at how much faster everything works with a clean re-install.

OTOH, if you just want to do a clean reload of CS, just uninstall all interations of PS, and do a re-install. If that does not work, I’d recommend the more thorough approach suggested above.

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