The TakeOwnerShipEx method obtains ownership of the logical file specified in the object path. If the logical file is actually a directory, then this method will act recursively, taking ownership of all the files and sub-directories the directory contains. TakeOwnerShipEx returns an integer value of 0 on success, and any other number to indicate an error. TakeOwnerShipEx is an extended version of the TakeOwnerShip method. It returns one of the following integer values: 0 - The request was successful. 2 - Access was denied. 8 - An unspecified failure occurred. 9 - The name specified was invalid. 10 - The object specified already exists. 11 - The file system is not NTFS. 12 - The platform is not Windows NT or Windows 2000. 13 - The drive is not the same. 14 - The directory is not empty. 15 - There has been a sharing violation. 16 - The start file specified was invalid. 17 - A privilege required for the operation is not held. 21 - A parameter specified is invalid.
The Tag property contains a string that uniquely identifies a port connection on the computer system. Example: Port Connector ...
The Tag property contains a string that uniquely identifies the physical memory device represented by an instance of Win32_PhysicalMemory. ...
The TagId property specifies a unique tag value for this service in the group. A value of 0 indicates that the service has ...
The TakeOwnerShip method obtains ownership of the logical file specified in the object path . If the logical file is actually ...
The TakeOwnerShipEx method obtains ownership of the logical file specified in the object path. If the logical file is actually ...
The target "%1!ws!" of this Internet Shortcut is not valid. Go to the Internet Shortcut property sheet and make sure the ...
The target computer supports Microsoft Windows 2000, Microsoft Windows XP and Microsoft Windows Server 2003 style security ...
The target drive does not meet the size requirements for BitLocker. The new system drive must be at least %1!d! MB in size. ...
The target drive must be on the same disk as the system drive. Use the '-driveinfo' command for a list of valid target drives. ...