Neil,
I have given all users registry access as identified in this article: http://www.top-password.com/blog/take-o ... indows-10/
The JDK is still not populating.
I will talk more with my IT department about full registry access on Monday.
Search found 12 matches
- Fri Sep 23, 2016 8:17 pm
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: JDK path is none
- Replies: 34
- Views: 39497
- Fri Sep 23, 2016 2:54 pm
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: JDK path is none
- Replies: 34
- Views: 39497
Re: JDK path is none
Neil,
The admin account produced the JDK path without issue, but the student account did not provide anything in the message box.
Should I be looking for anything else?
I will be looking at the registry permissions again, seeing if I can give students full permissions.
The admin account produced the JDK path without issue, but the student account did not provide anything in the message box.
Should I be looking for anything else?
I will be looking at the registry permissions again, seeing if I can give students full permissions.
- Wed Sep 21, 2016 7:27 pm
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: JDK path is none
- Replies: 34
- Views: 39497
Re: JDK path is none
Neil, I did incorrectly type the commands, my apologize (tried to quickly do it between classes). The commands do produce an output and it seems to be the project file's location. For this instance it is "C:\\users\student\desktop". I logged in as an admin and the same command produced "C:\WINDOWS\s...
- Wed Sep 21, 2016 3:16 pm
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: JDK path is none
- Replies: 34
- Views: 39497
Re: JDK path is none
I get the following error:
Script compile error:
Error description: set: no property specified.
Script compile error:
Error description: set: no property specified.
- Wed Sep 21, 2016 1:53 pm
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: JDK path is none
- Replies: 34
- Views: 39497
Re: JDK path is none
Neil,
Students seem to have sufficient access to cmd. They can run it cmd without admin privileges, and when I click the dx command line batch file, it behaves just as as admin account opening cmd for a second (does not say need admin privileges).
Students seem to have sufficient access to cmd. They can run it cmd without admin privileges, and when I click the dx command line batch file, it behaves just as as admin account opening cmd for a second (does not say need admin privileges).
- Tue Sep 20, 2016 7:41 pm
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: JDK path is none
- Replies: 34
- Views: 39497
Re: JDK path is none
Hello again Neil,
I was able to give permissions to the specified Regestry folder, and it did not fix our issue? Any other ideas?
Still getting the "Unable to build app for testing: could not encode class bundle".
Joe
I was able to give permissions to the specified Regestry folder, and it did not fix our issue? Any other ideas?
Still getting the "Unable to build app for testing: could not encode class bundle".
Joe
- Fri Sep 16, 2016 9:04 pm
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: JDK path is none
- Replies: 34
- Views: 39497
Re: JDK path is none
Neil, Here is a note from my IT Director at the school: Students are a standard user in a domain environment, They do not have access rights to the registry. That's pretty standard in a school environment. Is there a registry key that you write to that we can change permissions on or a temp folder w...
- Fri Sep 16, 2016 6:08 pm
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: JDK path is none
- Replies: 34
- Views: 39497
Re: JDK path is none
Neil, I am trying to get details on the student accounts from the IT department. In the meantime, if there a way for me to look at the info (open) the LC Preferences .rev file and see its content? make it is still referring to a location under my account and that is why we are having issues with the...
- Thu Sep 15, 2016 9:44 pm
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: JDK path is none
- Replies: 34
- Views: 39497
Re: JDK path is none
The Android SDK is located on the C: drive so all users can share it and doesn't take up valuable HDD space in each user profile. Students have permissions to read and write to the LiveCode program folder, the JDK folder, and the SDK folder.
Still receiving errors.
Still receiving errors.
- Thu Sep 15, 2016 1:41 pm
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: JDK path is none
- Replies: 34
- Views: 39497
Re: JDK path is none
Thank you for the help, Neil. I deleted the preferences folder and ran as admin, and that seemed to work, but that ran LC from my admin profile not the student one. I would have to type my admin password into the prompt each time LiveCode is launched. Not a pretty solution. What I tried next was to ...
- Wed Sep 14, 2016 10:21 pm
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: JDK path is none
- Replies: 34
- Views: 39497
Re: JDK path is none
Thank you for the quick reply, Richard. It is very appreciated. I do have the Android SDK selected and actually tried selecting the SDK path with Android Studio open, an emulator running, and a physical device connected (because I knew these things were properly finding the JDK). I tried testing an ...
- Wed Sep 14, 2016 8:49 pm
- Forum: Windows
- Topic: JDK path is none
- Replies: 34
- Views: 39497
Re: JDK path is none
Hello, I am a High School teacher that purchased Live Code Education (Indy). I am getting the same error of "none" for the JDK. This only happens on student account. On the same computer with my admin account, everything works perfectly so this is isolated to a student account issue. Android SDK and...