Hi Ken -- I'll let Trevor handle your other questions, but the important one here is this 20.0 folder question. And yes, you can either delete the existing 20.0 folder entirely or just change the name of 20.0 to 20.0_OLD or 20old as you have named it. There is no magic in the name -- just important that VS on reopening no longer sees a folder called plain old vanilla "20.0". But whether you rename it or delete it, when you next open X10, it will rebuild a new 20.0 folder itself and rebuild a new database which hopefully corrects problems in the old one or adds in, say, plug-ins which didn't show up before.Ken Veal wrote:Did you mean rename the 20.0 folder to 20.0_old with an underscore because all I did after looking at the image was to add a new folder named 20.0old and without an underscore.
The only reason we suggest renaming it is that if the new 20.0 rebuilt by X10 shows even more problems than before (though this is unlikely) then you can revert to your original 20.0 by deleting the new 20.0 folder and simply renaming your old one it by deleting "_OLD" or whatever letters/characters you have added to the name.
In other words, you yourself do not create a new 20.0 folder. You get X10 to do it for you.
