Jump Lists not showing for Office programs in Windows 7












0














I have a laptop running Windows 7 Home Premium. I installed Office 2010 on this laptop, and I noticed that Jump Lists were not showing. If I pin Word, Excel or PowerPoint to the taskbar or start menu, there is no Jump List menu where recent documents are shown and I can pin documents.



The Jump List menu does work (in both the taskbar and Start Menu) for Outlook and other programs like Windows Explorer and Skype. The feature never worked since I got this new laptop.



I used this feature all the time on my old laptop. Does anyone have any ideas about why Jump Lists aren't showing for Word, Excel or PowerPoint?



Here is what I have tried:




  • Deleted all files in %AppData%MicrosoftWindowsRecentAutomaticDestinations and %AppData%MicrosoftWindowsRecentCustomDestinations

  • Verified that file extensions for Office documents are correctly associated with Office programs

  • Uninstalled Office 2010 and installed Office 2013 (which is currently installed). Installed Service Pack 1 and all of the latest updates for Office 2013.

  • Verified that the following boxes are checked in Taskbar and Start Menu Properties:
    Taskbar and Start Menu Properties


Start MenuTaskbar










share|improve this question
























  • have you installed the Office 2013 SP1?
    – magicandre1981
    May 4 '14 at 5:23










  • @magicandre1981 Yes. SP1 and all of the latest updates are installed for Office 2013.
    – bdr9
    May 4 '14 at 14:55
















0














I have a laptop running Windows 7 Home Premium. I installed Office 2010 on this laptop, and I noticed that Jump Lists were not showing. If I pin Word, Excel or PowerPoint to the taskbar or start menu, there is no Jump List menu where recent documents are shown and I can pin documents.



The Jump List menu does work (in both the taskbar and Start Menu) for Outlook and other programs like Windows Explorer and Skype. The feature never worked since I got this new laptop.



I used this feature all the time on my old laptop. Does anyone have any ideas about why Jump Lists aren't showing for Word, Excel or PowerPoint?



Here is what I have tried:




  • Deleted all files in %AppData%MicrosoftWindowsRecentAutomaticDestinations and %AppData%MicrosoftWindowsRecentCustomDestinations

  • Verified that file extensions for Office documents are correctly associated with Office programs

  • Uninstalled Office 2010 and installed Office 2013 (which is currently installed). Installed Service Pack 1 and all of the latest updates for Office 2013.

  • Verified that the following boxes are checked in Taskbar and Start Menu Properties:
    Taskbar and Start Menu Properties


Start MenuTaskbar










share|improve this question
























  • have you installed the Office 2013 SP1?
    – magicandre1981
    May 4 '14 at 5:23










  • @magicandre1981 Yes. SP1 and all of the latest updates are installed for Office 2013.
    – bdr9
    May 4 '14 at 14:55














0












0








0


1





I have a laptop running Windows 7 Home Premium. I installed Office 2010 on this laptop, and I noticed that Jump Lists were not showing. If I pin Word, Excel or PowerPoint to the taskbar or start menu, there is no Jump List menu where recent documents are shown and I can pin documents.



The Jump List menu does work (in both the taskbar and Start Menu) for Outlook and other programs like Windows Explorer and Skype. The feature never worked since I got this new laptop.



I used this feature all the time on my old laptop. Does anyone have any ideas about why Jump Lists aren't showing for Word, Excel or PowerPoint?



Here is what I have tried:




  • Deleted all files in %AppData%MicrosoftWindowsRecentAutomaticDestinations and %AppData%MicrosoftWindowsRecentCustomDestinations

  • Verified that file extensions for Office documents are correctly associated with Office programs

  • Uninstalled Office 2010 and installed Office 2013 (which is currently installed). Installed Service Pack 1 and all of the latest updates for Office 2013.

  • Verified that the following boxes are checked in Taskbar and Start Menu Properties:
    Taskbar and Start Menu Properties


Start MenuTaskbar










share|improve this question















I have a laptop running Windows 7 Home Premium. I installed Office 2010 on this laptop, and I noticed that Jump Lists were not showing. If I pin Word, Excel or PowerPoint to the taskbar or start menu, there is no Jump List menu where recent documents are shown and I can pin documents.



The Jump List menu does work (in both the taskbar and Start Menu) for Outlook and other programs like Windows Explorer and Skype. The feature never worked since I got this new laptop.



I used this feature all the time on my old laptop. Does anyone have any ideas about why Jump Lists aren't showing for Word, Excel or PowerPoint?



Here is what I have tried:




  • Deleted all files in %AppData%MicrosoftWindowsRecentAutomaticDestinations and %AppData%MicrosoftWindowsRecentCustomDestinations

  • Verified that file extensions for Office documents are correctly associated with Office programs

  • Uninstalled Office 2010 and installed Office 2013 (which is currently installed). Installed Service Pack 1 and all of the latest updates for Office 2013.

  • Verified that the following boxes are checked in Taskbar and Start Menu Properties:
    Taskbar and Start Menu Properties


Start MenuTaskbar







windows-7 microsoft-office taskbar microsoft-office-2013 jumplist






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 4 '14 at 14:56

























asked May 3 '14 at 22:17









bdr9

2,26021736




2,26021736












  • have you installed the Office 2013 SP1?
    – magicandre1981
    May 4 '14 at 5:23










  • @magicandre1981 Yes. SP1 and all of the latest updates are installed for Office 2013.
    – bdr9
    May 4 '14 at 14:55


















  • have you installed the Office 2013 SP1?
    – magicandre1981
    May 4 '14 at 5:23










  • @magicandre1981 Yes. SP1 and all of the latest updates are installed for Office 2013.
    – bdr9
    May 4 '14 at 14:55
















have you installed the Office 2013 SP1?
– magicandre1981
May 4 '14 at 5:23




have you installed the Office 2013 SP1?
– magicandre1981
May 4 '14 at 5:23












@magicandre1981 Yes. SP1 and all of the latest updates are installed for Office 2013.
– bdr9
May 4 '14 at 14:55




@magicandre1981 Yes. SP1 and all of the latest updates are installed for Office 2013.
– bdr9
May 4 '14 at 14:55










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














Looking around, I see that this has not been comprehensively solved yet. I continue to search for fixes for myself.



I now believe that the problem is related to file associations - particularly with starter versions. In my case, this laptop probably came preloaded with starter 2010, and I installed 2013 before uninstalling it.



I see registry entries still calling out starter even after it's long gone from my system, so I will dive at that. Hopefully some registry wizards will jump in and help out!



---UPDATE---



Well, I tooled around in the registry and saw what to fix in, but all of the new Office entries (not the file extensions, but the class identifiers and whatnot) were too much to wrap my head around. So, nuke solution, which employs built-in repair:



in /HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT, I deleted the identifiers that mentioned Excel (Excel, Excel.Chart, Excel.Sheet.12, etc.), Word, and Powerpoint.



For good measure, I also deleted the clusters of entries for Excel, Word, and Powerpoint file extensions (.xls, .doc, .ppt), which totaled maybe 20 for Excel, 10 for Word, and 15 for Powerpoint.



I then let Office repair itself with Control Panel > Programs > Microsoft Office (blah blah) > Change > Repair (I chose quick repair). The jump menus immediately started working again, at least for Excel.



I believe that deleting and repairing the identifiers alone would be enough. I should mention that I've also tried the fix with clearing "%AppData%MicrosoftWindowsRecentAutomaticDestinations", so it might have to be used in conjunction with the registry repair. Hope this helps!






share|improve this answer






















    protected by Community Jan 11 '15 at 8:42



    Thank you for your interest in this question.
    Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



    Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    0














    Looking around, I see that this has not been comprehensively solved yet. I continue to search for fixes for myself.



    I now believe that the problem is related to file associations - particularly with starter versions. In my case, this laptop probably came preloaded with starter 2010, and I installed 2013 before uninstalling it.



    I see registry entries still calling out starter even after it's long gone from my system, so I will dive at that. Hopefully some registry wizards will jump in and help out!



    ---UPDATE---



    Well, I tooled around in the registry and saw what to fix in, but all of the new Office entries (not the file extensions, but the class identifiers and whatnot) were too much to wrap my head around. So, nuke solution, which employs built-in repair:



    in /HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT, I deleted the identifiers that mentioned Excel (Excel, Excel.Chart, Excel.Sheet.12, etc.), Word, and Powerpoint.



    For good measure, I also deleted the clusters of entries for Excel, Word, and Powerpoint file extensions (.xls, .doc, .ppt), which totaled maybe 20 for Excel, 10 for Word, and 15 for Powerpoint.



    I then let Office repair itself with Control Panel > Programs > Microsoft Office (blah blah) > Change > Repair (I chose quick repair). The jump menus immediately started working again, at least for Excel.



    I believe that deleting and repairing the identifiers alone would be enough. I should mention that I've also tried the fix with clearing "%AppData%MicrosoftWindowsRecentAutomaticDestinations", so it might have to be used in conjunction with the registry repair. Hope this helps!






    share|improve this answer




























      0














      Looking around, I see that this has not been comprehensively solved yet. I continue to search for fixes for myself.



      I now believe that the problem is related to file associations - particularly with starter versions. In my case, this laptop probably came preloaded with starter 2010, and I installed 2013 before uninstalling it.



      I see registry entries still calling out starter even after it's long gone from my system, so I will dive at that. Hopefully some registry wizards will jump in and help out!



      ---UPDATE---



      Well, I tooled around in the registry and saw what to fix in, but all of the new Office entries (not the file extensions, but the class identifiers and whatnot) were too much to wrap my head around. So, nuke solution, which employs built-in repair:



      in /HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT, I deleted the identifiers that mentioned Excel (Excel, Excel.Chart, Excel.Sheet.12, etc.), Word, and Powerpoint.



      For good measure, I also deleted the clusters of entries for Excel, Word, and Powerpoint file extensions (.xls, .doc, .ppt), which totaled maybe 20 for Excel, 10 for Word, and 15 for Powerpoint.



      I then let Office repair itself with Control Panel > Programs > Microsoft Office (blah blah) > Change > Repair (I chose quick repair). The jump menus immediately started working again, at least for Excel.



      I believe that deleting and repairing the identifiers alone would be enough. I should mention that I've also tried the fix with clearing "%AppData%MicrosoftWindowsRecentAutomaticDestinations", so it might have to be used in conjunction with the registry repair. Hope this helps!






      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0






        Looking around, I see that this has not been comprehensively solved yet. I continue to search for fixes for myself.



        I now believe that the problem is related to file associations - particularly with starter versions. In my case, this laptop probably came preloaded with starter 2010, and I installed 2013 before uninstalling it.



        I see registry entries still calling out starter even after it's long gone from my system, so I will dive at that. Hopefully some registry wizards will jump in and help out!



        ---UPDATE---



        Well, I tooled around in the registry and saw what to fix in, but all of the new Office entries (not the file extensions, but the class identifiers and whatnot) were too much to wrap my head around. So, nuke solution, which employs built-in repair:



        in /HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT, I deleted the identifiers that mentioned Excel (Excel, Excel.Chart, Excel.Sheet.12, etc.), Word, and Powerpoint.



        For good measure, I also deleted the clusters of entries for Excel, Word, and Powerpoint file extensions (.xls, .doc, .ppt), which totaled maybe 20 for Excel, 10 for Word, and 15 for Powerpoint.



        I then let Office repair itself with Control Panel > Programs > Microsoft Office (blah blah) > Change > Repair (I chose quick repair). The jump menus immediately started working again, at least for Excel.



        I believe that deleting and repairing the identifiers alone would be enough. I should mention that I've also tried the fix with clearing "%AppData%MicrosoftWindowsRecentAutomaticDestinations", so it might have to be used in conjunction with the registry repair. Hope this helps!






        share|improve this answer














        Looking around, I see that this has not been comprehensively solved yet. I continue to search for fixes for myself.



        I now believe that the problem is related to file associations - particularly with starter versions. In my case, this laptop probably came preloaded with starter 2010, and I installed 2013 before uninstalling it.



        I see registry entries still calling out starter even after it's long gone from my system, so I will dive at that. Hopefully some registry wizards will jump in and help out!



        ---UPDATE---



        Well, I tooled around in the registry and saw what to fix in, but all of the new Office entries (not the file extensions, but the class identifiers and whatnot) were too much to wrap my head around. So, nuke solution, which employs built-in repair:



        in /HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT, I deleted the identifiers that mentioned Excel (Excel, Excel.Chart, Excel.Sheet.12, etc.), Word, and Powerpoint.



        For good measure, I also deleted the clusters of entries for Excel, Word, and Powerpoint file extensions (.xls, .doc, .ppt), which totaled maybe 20 for Excel, 10 for Word, and 15 for Powerpoint.



        I then let Office repair itself with Control Panel > Programs > Microsoft Office (blah blah) > Change > Repair (I chose quick repair). The jump menus immediately started working again, at least for Excel.



        I believe that deleting and repairing the identifiers alone would be enough. I should mention that I've also tried the fix with clearing "%AppData%MicrosoftWindowsRecentAutomaticDestinations", so it might have to be used in conjunction with the registry repair. Hope this helps!







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Jan 30 '16 at 19:01









        Stackcraft_noob

        1,314313




        1,314313










        answered Aug 5 '14 at 1:16









        jdsv

        11




        11

















            protected by Community Jan 11 '15 at 8:42



            Thank you for your interest in this question.
            Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



            Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



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