

I am attaching a sample installer that demonstrates the idea behind this:

I believe that I can do this with a Visual Studio 2010 setup project. Detect if the system has a 64-bit version of Excel on it (this can also be done by simply looking at a few registry keys) and launch the 圆4 installer. Detect if the system has a 32-bit version of Excel on it (this can be done by simply looking at a few registry keys) and launch the x86 installer.Ģb. It's only the target location and the registry that differ.Ģa. The program files are the same between x86 and 圆4. Combine the 2 installers into a single installer. This will not be the case for most users as Office 2010 will install the x86 version on Win 7 圆4 by default to avoid a boat load of confusion when users find out their old addins and compiled function libraries no longer work in 圆4.Īs it stands now, our users will have to choose to download and install either the x86 version or the 圆4 version.ġ. Many will just assume that since they are running Win 7 圆4 then the version of Office 2010 they installed is also 圆4. We are anticipating confusion from our users when it comes to Office 2010 x86 versus 圆4. We will be releasing our 圆4 installer when Office 2010 ships. Currently I have a separate AI Installer for x86 and 圆4. DiskGenius Eassos Ltd for their Free-Partition-Manager.I have an Excel addin that is compiled for An圜PU.(Used as the bootloader for multi-booting) This installer relies on some external programs to enrich itself, without them it wouldn't have been cool enough. > The only solution to resolve this issue is to RESTART windows and then following the same installation process, but that time skip partitioning since you've already done that. > Sometimes the installer fails to mount your Ext2/3/4 filesystems as read and write, thus it gets mounted as read-only and it remains in panic-mode. Files failed to install over extFS installation option.> Try to revert any modifications made from softwares like EasyBCD, EasyUEFI etc. > Most likely your boot partition is a bit messed up.

