Login to the computer as an Administrator or someone who has administrative privileges, you should then be able to access regedit via the run command.
Most likely reason access has been disabled is because you have limited permissions to the computer. You only modify the registry if you know how to use a computer (as it can cause serious damage leaving your computer unusable), if that is true then there should have been no need to post this question.
Use the program "regedit" in the run toolbar from windows.
click windows search and type "regedit"
Go to run type regedit, and press enter it will take you to registry , to repair ur registry run reginout cleaner
You can go to "run" and then wrtite "regedit". it will open registry editor.
go to run and type regedit and also be care full of editing registry , first make a back up of it
To access the Registry Editor on a Windows operating system you must press the Start button and click on Run. In the box you enter "regedit" and then press Enter. The Registry Editor will open.
The operating system will not allow limited users to change any of the system's settings or applications or add/removing programs or registry. Only Administrators can do all these things. User can only view the data. so the in the user account when user want to access registry he can not access and it shows an error as "Registry editing is Disable by your Administrator" I didn't find the above answer useful. Visit the related link where you will find how to enable or disable registry.
Hi there, Click on the Start menu > type in REGEDIT > hit Enter > you should see the Windows Registry Editor window. This offers access to the Windows Registry. You should refrain from making any changes here, unless you know what you are doing.
There is no password to access the registry on Windows Vista.
A Computer Registry is a database that stores all the configuration settings and options of the Microsoft Windows operating systems. It stores settings for operating system components, applications, 3rd party applications, kernel, device drivers, sam, services, and user interface. You can go to "run" and type "Regedit" to access the windows registry. If you are not familiar with the Registry, do not make any changes otherwise you can do some serious damage.
Click on "Start" then "Run" and enter in the following command: regedit ** Warning: before making any changes in the registry, you should probably make a backup of the current registry or make a new System Restore checkpoint so if something messes up, you can rollback to your old registry settings.
Copy all starting with 'Enable Registry Editing and save to a text file and call it EnableRegistryEdit.vbsOf course you need to have scripting enabled. Then simply double click and it will delete that value from registry.'Enable Registry Editing''© Veegertx - 4/7/2004'This code may be freely distributed/modifiedOn Error Resume Next'Prevents errors from values that don't existSet WshShell = WScript.CreateObject("WScript.Shell")'Delete DisableRegistryTools registry valuesWshShell.RegDelete "HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\System\DisableRegistryTools"WshShell.RegDelete "HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\System\DisableRegistryTools"'display messageMessage = "You should have access to Regedit now"X = MsgBox(Message, vbOKOnly, "Done")Set WshShell = NothingSet fso = Nothing