The loadpoint dir is the last place I'd store ANY configuration files. This
drive is often not backed up, making your data automatically
vulnerable; configuration data is addtionally vulnerable due to PTC.Setup
overwriting the loadpoint directories any time you do a repair, upgrade or
maintenance install. You really need to store all your config files in a "home"
directory that gets backed up. This folder can be specified by doing Properties
on the icon or start menu item that launches Pro/e and specifying the full path
in the "Start in:" box. Be sure to enclose the path string in quotes. Then put
all your configuration files here and browse to this location to load your
tree.cfg, syscol.scl,
config.pro, color.map, config.win, dtl and other
files.
If you don't have a complete
config.pro with all available options, do the
following:
1) load whatever customizations you already have by going to the
'Tools>Options' menu and clicking the folder icon at the top to browse to
your existing
config.pro file;
2) in the box labelled "Showing:", click the arrow to get the dropdown. It
should list your loaded file at the top. At the bottom of the list, it should
say Current Session. Click on this.
3) uncheck the box that says "Show only options loaded from file"; this
will display all the options, including those not loaded from your
config.pro file;
4) save this file to your "Start in" directory and it will load
automatically each time you launch Pro/e; it will also be the default save
location when you've customized your options and want to capture the changes to
disk.
You may never want to change 95% of the options. In some repects, this
complete options file may seem excessive. Your personal
config.pro could contain
ONLY the options you've customized. But for anyone new to the business of
configuring Pro/e, the complete list is helpful. For one, you can use the Find
function, including searching on descriptions, to locate the option you want.
Also, it's an opportunity to go browsing and check out what can be
customized, with what options. And it provides helpful information such as the
current status of the option, whether the current value is the default as well
as marking defunct, obsolete options.
David Janes