Take this message as a "cautionary situation" until the flight sim community in general has verified this situation and it's ramifications completely.........
I've been surfing the various forums as I sometimes do.
Seems a little shortsighted on Adobe's part. I wonder what Microsoft have to say?
Seems a little shortsighted on Adobe's part. I wonder what Microsoft have to say?
This is true for some texture files (such as one extentioned .daf and you happen to have a certain download program installed). With XP (and, I expect, Vista) you needn't reassociate and double click: right click, then select Open with... and then your option.The only problem might be if you try to open the files by double-clicking on them.
A similar thing happened with the .cfg file extension which is used by many other applications including MS Office Outlook. It should be perfectly safe to re-associate CFG files with Notepad or any other program you wish.
This is true for some texture files (such as one extentioned .daf and you happen to have a certain download program installed). With XP (and, I expect, Vista) you needn't reassociate and double click: right click, then select Open with... and then your option.The only problem might be if you try to open the files by double-clicking on them.
A similar thing happened with the .cfg file extension which is used by many other applications including MS Office Outlook. It should be perfectly safe to re-associate CFG files with Notepad or any other program you wish.
That is the (& your) point. Associating files applies to you manually opening them. A program being written to open a certain file is, effectively, the same as you using the Open With... option. When you double-click, you initiate the "default" program for your manual opening of the file. Unless Adobe has engineered some sort of default lock-out, the only thing that may be affected is your manual default for that file extension; it shouldn't affect program operation.We all have our favourite ways of working but that is not the point I was trying to make. If I'm correct about the default file association with this new Adobe software, associating file types with a specific application will not prevent the files being opened or accessed by other programs...
That is the (& your) point. Associating files applies to you manually opening them. A program being written to open a certain file is, effectively, the same as you using the Open With... option. When you double-click, you initiate the "default" program for your manual opening of the file. Unless Adobe has engineered some sort of default lock-out, the only thing that may be affected is your manual default for that file extension; it shouldn't affect program operation.We all have our favourite ways of working but that is not the point I was trying to make. If I'm correct about the default file association with this new Adobe software, associating file types with a specific application will not prevent the files being opened or accessed by other programs...
8-)
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