On Sat, May 3, 2008 at 7:13 AM, Peter Arrenbrecht
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Fri, Apr 25, 2008 at 5:41 PM, Adrian Buehlmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  > On 25.04.2008 16:53, Adrian Buehlmann wrote:
>  >  > On 25.04.2008 16:06, Doug Philips wrote:
>  >  >> On Friday, April 25, 2008, at 08:58AM, "Adrian Buehlmann" wrote:
>  >  >>> What do you think a tool does if it tries to delete a
>  >  >>> non-existing registry key? Format your harddisk?
>  >  >> It might decide that the system is in an inconsistent state and rather 
> than risk screwing it up, it could reasonably decline to de-install (or 
> finish de-installing depending on when it checks)...
>  >  >
>  >  > LOL. If uninstallers were that nitpicky then they would
>  >  > be not very successful.
>  >  >
>  >  >>> Hopefully not, since the installation of those registry
>  >  >>> keys could have failed, too.
>  >  >> ??
>  >  >
>  >  > The installer could fail installing a registry key for
>  >  > various reasons, one of them could be that the target
>  >  > key's permission don't allow write access.
>  >  >
>  >  > Writing the uninstaller part based on the assumption
>  >  > that all keys were 100% successfully installed would
>  >  > be rather silly.
>  >  >
>  >
>  >  Speaking of which, Explorer allows only fifteen slots for
>  >  icon overlays, ignoring all in excess.
>  >
>  >  As discussed on
>  >  http://selenic.com/pipermail/mercurial/2008-April/018616.html
>  >
>  >  I haven't heard of TortoiseHG going wild in that situation.
>  >  The overlay icons are simply not displayed in that case.
>  >  The rest of THG still works.
>  >
>  >  As a (hopefully) last comment on this thread, the THG overlay
>  >  handler still caches filenames and reads local and global hgrc files
>  >  even if the icons are disabled globally in Mercurial.ini, thus
>  >  wasting CPU time and memory for users wanting to permanently *not*
>  >  having any overlay icons on any repository. THG overlay handler
>  >  also kicks in if an open file dialog from *any* application is opened.
>  >
>  >  Removing the entries in the registry, as I wrote, is the most
>  >  effective solution with regards to speed for the case when
>  >  the user permanently doesn't want to have any overlay icons ever.
>
>  I for one welcome Adrian's hint.
>
>  So would this not be a good candidate for an installer option? To skip
>  installation of the whole overlay handler?

Sound like we are in urgent need of a 'TortoiseHG Explorer' app.
Anyone ready to take the challenge?

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