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Is Your App Running As Administrator?

By , 19 Jan 2011
 
You can also add an application manifest file. If you're using VS 2010, there's an option for one in the "Add New Item" dialog (right click on the project, click "Add" then click "New Item") and edit the generated file to uncomment the line that says:
 
<requestedExecutionLevel  level="requireAdministrator" uiAccess="false" />
 
This not only forces the UAC dialog to open when you run the application, it also puts a little shield over your icon (well, in Windows 7 anyway).
 
There's a little more information on MSDN here.

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Sam Cragg
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GeneralMaybe both approaches are valid. If the windows can't unders...memberdanlobo18 Oct '11 - 2:42 
Maybe both approaches are valid. If the windows can't understand what the manifest means (since is recent. XP, maybe?), saying programmatically to the user to raise the privileges would be another option.

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