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an unhandled win32 exception occurred in uv4.exe [11320]

Hi, recently I commenced to receive the following message in Keil uVision: an unhandled win32 exception occurred in uv4.exe [11320]. This message commencing to appears from nothing and now it appears every time. The program closes, this is very annoying. I upgraded to the latest version, run as administrator, run in compatibility mode (win 7 and XP) and nothing. Any idea of how repair this issue?

I use Windows 10 x64, TivaC TM4C123GH6PM with STELLARIS ICDI, and the latest version of TIVAWARE (TivaWare_C_Series-2.1.3.156). Too I use the working folder inside of OneDrive. I tryed to close OneDrive to prevent updates to the cloud, but nothing.
The error occurs when I try to program the TIVA!!!

Parents
  • I normally install a new OS on a new machine, and keep the old machine for a year or two. Just to make sure I have a backup solution in case something doesn't work out as expected.

    M$ regularly "helps" the world, by removing or changing functionality that they think makes life hard for the computer-illiterate. That the changes breaks existing programs or makes a living hell for some computer professionals, isn't something M$ cares too much about.

    Hence we now have an OS that makes a high-end workstation look and behave as a $100 cheap tablet, with the expectation that we should use our fingers to point on our multiple 27" monitors. And if I turn off the main monitor, then M$ treats it the same as a tablet being removed from a docking station moving all windows to the secondary monitor - but forgetting that the secondary monitor is in portrait mode... Combine this with a bit of remote desktop, and it's quick to get a program or two end up totally above or to the side of a monitor and so unaccessible unless zoomed full-screen...

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  • I normally install a new OS on a new machine, and keep the old machine for a year or two. Just to make sure I have a backup solution in case something doesn't work out as expected.

    M$ regularly "helps" the world, by removing or changing functionality that they think makes life hard for the computer-illiterate. That the changes breaks existing programs or makes a living hell for some computer professionals, isn't something M$ cares too much about.

    Hence we now have an OS that makes a high-end workstation look and behave as a $100 cheap tablet, with the expectation that we should use our fingers to point on our multiple 27" monitors. And if I turn off the main monitor, then M$ treats it the same as a tablet being removed from a docking station moving all windows to the secondary monitor - but forgetting that the secondary monitor is in portrait mode... Combine this with a bit of remote desktop, and it's quick to get a program or two end up totally above or to the side of a monitor and so unaccessible unless zoomed full-screen...

Children