Dll files starting with O

0-9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
oemlicense.dll

Client Licensing Platform Client Provisioning

ofcommon.dll

Advanced SystemCare 7 Library

offfilt.dll

OFFICE Filter

offfiltx.dll

Microsoft Office Open XML Format Filter

office.dll

Microsoft.Office.Core

office10.dll

MS Office Global MediaStore Elements re Office10

officeav.dll

Norton AntiVirus_Office Plugin

offowc.dll

Microsoft Office XP Web Components

offreg.dll

Offline registry DLL

ofx.dll

Money OFX Driver Library

ogg.dll

Audio plugin

oggds.dll

OggDS

ogldrv.dll

MSOGL

ogscertificationutility-5_2.dll

OGS CertificationUtility dll

oifil400.dll

FILING LIBRARY

oinfos11.dll

Office Data Provider for WBEM

oisapp.dll

Microsoft Office Picture Manager App

oisctrl.dll

Microsoft Office 2010 Launcher Control

oisgraph.dll

Microsoft Office 2010 Graphics

oisintl.dll

Microsoft Office Picture Manager International Resources

ok9ibres.dll

برنامج تشغيل OKI9IBM

okdteres.dll

برنامج تشغيل الطابعة OKI MICROLINE

okdtures.dll

برنامج تشغيل الطابعة OKI MICROLINE

okescpu.dll

OKI MICROLINE Printer Driver

olch2d32.dll

Olectra Chart 2D Control for 32bit Windows

ole32.dll

Microsoft OLE for Windows

oleacc.dll

Active Accessibility Core Component

oleacchooks.dll

Active Accessibility Event Hooks Library

oleaccrc.dll

Active Accessibility Resource DLL

oleaut32.dll

OLEAUT32.DLL

olecli32.dll

Object Linking and Embedding Client Library

olecnv32.dll

Microsoft OLE for Windows

oledb32.dll

OLE DB Core Services

oledb32r.dll

OLE DB Core Services Resources

oledlg.dll

OLE User Interface Support

oleprn.dll

Oleprn DLL

Fix a DLL error: the complete guide

When you get a system error window telling that a DLL file is missing, the following questions arise: what is its purpose?

DLL files have a fundamental purpose, to reduce code and increase computer performance. A DLL file is a dynamic library that is used by all applications.

Errors may occur on a Windows PC that is associated with DLL files. These errors prevent the user from running his required programs. Error messages begin to show up on the screen, specifying exactly which .DLL file is missing. The problem can be solved by finding the specific file and placing it in the system directory.

Read more about DLL files

DLL files are considered in most usage operations to be the main factor in errors when Windows starts up and runs. A DLL file does not need to be edited because it can cause new problems that will affect many programs with other DLL files.

The codes in a DLL are considered to be shared by the processes that need the DLL (the files are in physical memory).

DLL files in older versions of Windows

Older versions of Windows, where each running process had one extensive task area, required one copy of DLL code.

For example, specific programs from a loaded DLL do not have these addresses in a free base. Then you need to make another copy of the DLL code with a base of a unique set of relocatable input coefficients. If physical memory needs to be restored, the busy partition code is reset along with the contents, and a quick reload from the DLL file is done. Also, GDI loads all the other device drivers, so Windows starts to load the rest of the Windows packages, calling these programs API from USER/GDI.

Because of this, the DLL file carries a lot of utilities at once. With DLL updates to a modern version, the previous version is overwritten or deleted from the PC. ActiveX Controls, Control Panel Recordsdata, and device drivers are the basis of data for Windows as Dynamic Link Libraries.

How to fix DLL errors?

There are several proven ways to deal with DLL problems:

Additional information about DLL files

Related executable files can be loaded earlier if you run them in similar settings that they were compiled. Let's add that every standard Windows target has associated DLL files.

A great alternative to binding the import to the target environment is to boot with a utility installation. But such a program changes the check value of the executable. Later versions of Windows no longer have the address of each loaded library, which leads to a much smaller executable.

Many dynamic linking libraries have a .DLL ending in their files, but other libraries use .OCX, .CPL, .DRV. Definition packages, such as UPX compress the DLL, which leads to a problem: the read and write code sections are not separated. These sections resemble non-public partitions because they are private within each process.

As a result, DLLs with public sections must necessarily be uncompressed when multiple packages use them simultaneously. Each instance of the program must have one private copy of the DLL.