So, since I’ve recently had a few posts regarding opening images in Microsoft Photo Viewer, MS Photos:
I thought I’d also demonstrate how easy it is to open an image in Paint as I know many people love to use Paint.
So, since I’ve recently had a few posts regarding opening images in Microsoft Photo Viewer, MS Photos:
I thought I’d also demonstrate how easy it is to open an image in Paint as I know many people love to use Paint.
Relating to a question in my previous post
in which David Marten inquired about doing the same in MS Photos, I decided to look into the matter.
I was surprised at that I couldn’t locate any examples of this. The only ones that would work were if MS-Photos was already defined as the system’s default image editor, then you could use any approach to launch the file and it would obviously open in MS-Photos (nothing easier that FollowHyperlink). Sadly, having MS-Photos as the default editor is not likely and messing with users’ registry wasn’t an avenue I wanted to use.
I went through 100s of threads and not 1 worked!
Ever had the need to specifically open an image in Windows Photo Viewer?
I’ve provided a multitude of ways to open files:
but what if we don’t necessarily want to use the default application and want to specifically open the image in the Windows Photo Viewer?
Over the years, I’ve released a number of posts and functions for working with images using WIA:

so on and so forth!
Fellow MVP Alum George Hepworth just recently flagged a new ‘feature’ that he ran into in which at the startup of his database he suddenly started receiving a message box stating
Yes | NoMicrosoft Access
Just a quick word of caution with an issue I recently encountered while trying to develop a Power Automate – Flow.
I won’t bore you with all the details, but I was building a branch of a Flow and needed to add in a pause/delay and so I added a Delay Action. Everything worked fine.
Then my client decided that they no longer wanted a delay, so I set the delay Count (the interval) to 0 and saved my worked.
A little while longer, I received failure notices stating:
I’ve previously posted how we can determine the label which is associated with a control:
There, in the comments, David asked how we could do the inverse, that is determine the control associated to a given label. At the time I wasn’t aware of any simple solution, but today Bruce Hulsey was kind enough to share with us that there was indeed a simple solution. Building upon his statement, below is a function we can use to determine to which control a label is associated:
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Ever needed to get the Base URL (also referred to as Origin) from a full URL?
So given a URL like:
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/templates/CT101527321033.aspx?av=ZAC
get/return:
http://office.microsoft.com
Well, it truly isn’t hard once you know how. Below are a couple different approaches that you can employ to get the job done:
When we’re going to work with a file, it is usually a good idea to first test to ensure the file exists. The same is true in the world of web programming.
For instance, I have an article that demonstrates how you can download files from a URL:
and in it I trap the error that the file/resource cannot be accessed/located. That said, it would be a good idea, to start off, by checking to ensure that the domain URL exists.
Furthermore, such functions can also be useful for validating data entry to ensure that someone didn’t make a typo.
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Have you ever needed to check and see if a URL got redirected, and if so what the final resulting URL was?
Well, I did and here’s how I solved the issue!
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