Difference between revisions of "I installed Vista under Microsoft Windows using InterSystems Cache using a CACHE.DAT file. Do I now have the CPRS program?"
From VistApedia
DavidWhitten (talk | contribs) |
|||
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | I installed | + | I installed VistA under Microsoft Windows using InterSystems Cache using a CACHE.DAT [[file~|File]]. Do I now have the [[CPRS~|CPRS]] program? |
− | No. | + | No. You have the server code and data in the CACHE.DAT, but not the client side code. |
{{:CPRS Executable Details}} | {{:CPRS Executable Details}} | ||
− | [Category:FAQ] | + | [[Category:FAQ]][[Category:Cache]][[Category:MS Windows]] |
Latest revision as of 19:03, 25 January 2016
I installed VistA under Microsoft Windows using InterSystems Cache using a CACHE.DAT File. Do I now have the CPRS program?
No. You have the server code and data in the CACHE.DAT, but not the client side code.
The CPRS program is actually a separate Microsoft Windows executable. Before version 26, it was only a program named CPRSChart.exe that could be anywhere on your system. Since CPRS usually needs to know how to contact the VistA server, most people use a shortcut to start it. After version 26, a separate DLL is also required named "BORLNDMM.DLL" which handles some memory management for CPRS.