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Does anyone ever use those stock icons in shell32
Does anyone ever use those stock icons in shell32









does anyone ever use those stock icons in shell32
  1. #Does anyone ever use those stock icons in shell32 how to#
  2. #Does anyone ever use those stock icons in shell32 full#

$DestinationFolder = $PSCmdlet.GetUnresolvedProviderPathFromPSPath($DestinationFolder) You can also use Microangelo Librarian (shareware) to change existing icons in shell32.dll.

#Does anyone ever use those stock icons in shell32 how to#

Here is a tutorial about how to do it with Resource Hacker. As I said, I don't recommend editing it as it is a very sensitive system file. I have found an image map detailing the icons location in shell32.dll in Windows XP but was wondering if anyone knew of something similar for Windows 7. SmallIcon.ToBitmap().Save(outFiles.FullName) The icons in shell32.dll can be changed using a Resource Editor ( Resource Hacker, Exescope, etc.). However, the article uses shell32.dll and a icon location to do so.

#Does anyone ever use those stock icons in shell32 full#

Persists through a full restart and restarting of explorer. To get what you want, you will need to do two things. Does this happen to anyone else After a recent update, some icons in the notification area become invisible and interactable. LargeIcon.ToBitmap().Save(outFiles.FullName) Just to be clear, dll files are not desktop icons, but libraries.

does anyone ever use those stock icons in shell32

If ($SourceEXEFilePath.ToLower().Contains(".dll")). If anyone has a better method that works similarly but obtains higher quality icons then I'd be interested to hear about it. Icon index #5 was at the top of column two on my Windows 7 圆4 machine. NB: Index #2 is beneath #1 and not to its right. Find the icon you wish to use and work out its index. Paste in path C:\Windows\System32\shell32.dll and click OK. Looks like a Compact Flash to USB reader. Then right-click the new shortcut and select Properties then click 'Change Icon' button in the Shortcut tab. I discovered the icon index that I needed was #238 by trial and error by temporarily creating a new shortcut (right-click on your desktop and select New -> Shortcut and type in calc and press Enter twice). The parameters I entered were (the source DLL path, target icon file name and the icon index within the DLL file): I needed to extract icon #238 from shell32.dll and didn't want to download Visual Studio or Resourcehacker, so I found a couple of PowerShell scripts from Technet (thanks John Grenfell and to # ) that did something similar and created a new script (below) to suit my needs. There may not be a file path to an icon with the way Windows works.











Does anyone ever use those stock icons in shell32