The ParentProcessId property specifies the unique identifier of the process that created this process. Process identifier numbers are reused, so they only identify a process for the lifetime of that process. It is possible that the process identified by ParentProcessId has terminated, so ParentProcessId may not refer to an running process. It is also possible that ParentProcessId incorrectly refers to a process which re-used that process identifier. The CreationDate property can be used to determine whether the specified parent was created after this process was created.
The parameters to the Windows.Foundation.Metadata.ComposableAttribute for type %1 in file %2 are invalid. The ComposableAttribute ...
The parent CA has denied your request because you are not a domain administrator. (%1) To obtain the certificate for your ...
The parent of the object we tried to add is missing because it is deleted. A modification and a parent delete occurred at ...
The parent scope node ID {0} given for scope node {1} is not a valid scope node. The node might not exist or might have been ...
The ParentProcessId property specifies the unique identifier of the process that created this process. Process identifier ...
The Parity property specifies the method of parity checking to be used. Parity is used as an error checking technique where ...
The ParityCheckEnabled property determines whether parity checking is enabled. Values: TRUE or FALSE. If TRUE, parity checking ...
The parser detected either a close delimiter without a corresponding open delimiter or detected a nested open delimiter. ...
The parser discovered a top level collection in a complex device (more than one top level collection) that had no declared ...