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I wanted to remove some entries (Play in BSplayer, Open as Notebook in OneNote etc.) in the context menu in Win XP SP3. I wanted to follow.
You need to use the /hyperlink option in the command line.You can open any page.I find it very convenient to open a sticky docked note on the side of the screen (very convenient for to do lists, etc.), by using the /docked option. Here's how.Create a shortcut in the Taskbar, with a link to the page.Syntax: fullpathtoonenote.exe /docked /hyperlink hyperlinktothepage.To create the full command of the shortcut, use Notepad, Wordpad or any other note taking app.Copy-paste the full path to OneNote.exe (e.g.
'C:Program Files (x86)Microsoft OfficerootOffice16ONENOTE.EXE'). Either from the icon on the taskbar (Pin OneNote to taskbar first if not pinned yet (right-click the icon then right-click again on the program to display the properties), or from the program folder.In OneNote, right-click the page you want to open and select 'Copy Link To Page'. Paste to the NotePad and copy the hyperlink (the first link, the second looks like onenote:).Paste the hyperlink after the path to OneNote.exe.Insert /hyperlink or /docked /hyperlink between the two.Create the shortcut by right-clicking on the desktop and pasting the full path created above.Drag-drop the shorcut to the TaskBar.Alternative: Create a jump-list item.
Create a shortcut with the hyperlink, as if you wanted a desktop shortcut to open the web app at the selected page (right-click/new shortcut/. Drag-drop the shortcut icon to the OneNote icon on the taskbar. This creates a pinned jump list item. This method is easier and faster, but it won't allow you to create a docked page.Useful reference for command switches:. Updated answer for OneNote for Windows 10 as of build 1806 and later:First, get the pair of links to the workbooks:. Open your workbook (in the app). In the notebooks list, right click on the desired workbook.
In the context menu, select 'copy link to notebook'(as noted in related articles, copying this link actually puts 2 flavors of link on the clipboard)Next, paste the links into a text editor (e.g, Notepad.exe). Note that there are 2 lines pasted, and the path in the second isn't quite the same as the ID in the first. Onenote:finally, paste the onenote:line into a new desktop shortcut.It will open in OneNote app. You don't need to make the shortcut invoke the onenote.exe, it's already magically bound to the onenote: protocol.
I've been uning OneNote for a while now. I recently installed a second drive and am running Win 7 on it, and wish to copy data to this drive, in the location where Windows 7 would store OneNote data. I found the data on the drive where it was created,under XP Pro, but where exactly on the Win 7 parttion (a whole different physical drive) does OneNote store data that users create?
I want to copy my old data, from that other drive, to the proper place so that when I open OneNote (under Win 7) all thosefiles that I previously created with OneNote will appear.