If your concern is to check whether the distributed plgx file wasn't altered in any way (maliciously) then you can try the "other" method (unpack the plgx file and compare the files against the source code repository). See this tool I've made. https://github.com/cristianst85/PlgxUnpacker.NET https://sourceforge.net/p/keepass/discussion/329220/thread/0b62a014ff/#7824
If your concern is to check whether the distributed plgx file wasn't altered in any way (maliciously) then you can try the "other" method (unpack the plgx file and compare the files against the source code repository). See this tool I've made. https://github.com/cristianst85/PlgxUnpacker.NET https://sourceforge.net/p/keepass/discussion/329220/thread/0b62a014ff/
Hello. I've made a small Windows tool for unpacking KeePass PLGX files. No KeePass executable dependency is required. It can also integrate into Shell Context Menu and associate with PLGX files (files having .plgx extension). Consider it a working prototype. https://github.com/cristianst85/PlgxUnpacker.Tools There is also a standalone library PlgxUnpacker.NET (available on NuGet). https://github.com/cristianst85/PlgxUnpacker.NET
Inspired by Geograph's idea, I've made a small Windows tool for unpacking KeePass PLGX files. No KeePass executable dependency is required. It can also integrate into Shell Context Menu and associate with PLGX files (files having .plgx extension). https://github.com/cristianst85/PlgxUnpacker.Tools There is also a standalone library PlgxUnpacker.NET (available on NuGet). https://github.com/cristianst85/PlgxUnpacker.NET
Inspired by Geograph's idea, I've made a small Windows tool for unpacking KeePass PLGX files. No KeePass executable dependency is required. It can also integrate into Shell Context Menu and associate with PLGX files (files having .plgx extension). https://github.com/cristianst85/PlgxUnpacker.Tools There is also a standalone library PlgxUnpackerNet (available on NuGet). https://github.com/cristianst85/PlgxUnpacker
Hello. I've made a small Windows tool for unpacking KeePass PLGX files. No KeePass executable dependency is required. It can also integrate into Shell Context Menu and associate with PLGX files (files having .plgx extension). Consider it a working prototype. https://github.com/cristianst85/PlgxUnpacker.Tools There is also a standalone library PlgxUnpackerNet (available on NuGet). https://github.com/cristianst85/PlgxUnpacker
Sorry, you are right. I am always using both those settings checked and I never noticed this behavior. Basically you want a "Close to system tray" setting/behavior independent of the minimization setting(s).
Sorry, you are right. I am always using both those settings checked and I never noticed this behavior. Basically you want a "Close to system tray" setting/behavior.