Use Windows Explorer and look for the files 'manually'. If you used the Search function and didn't enter the correct search criteria (such as your database not having DAT as the extension), the search may have come up empty when this really is the problem. If you scroll down the list of files, near the very bottom, you should see the QCC#### files. For example, if you have deleted batch 108, there should be no files related to this (ie QCC0108i.DAT). If there are, then this is a problem. Only OPEN batches should have existing files in the database.

Here's a link to another particular posting, regarding the batch listing and an error 533. I mention this one specifically because it came from another division of Cornell Cooperative...

Error 533 link

If you search this forum for 533, you will find about another dozen postings or so.
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If the multi-user files are clean and there are no orphan batches, then I suspect either something new has been installed on your machine or something is wrong with your data. If you have access to Quik Check for Windows from another workstation, give it a try from there. Should this work, then there is a problem with the particular workstation.

Also try printing the batch listing report from the provided sample data in \softrak\qcwin\samdata. You may need to create a new batch if one doesn't already exist. Should that work, then the problem resides with your database.

Quik Check for Windows has been discontinued for a few years now, and we can't guarantee that it will work successfully on newer environments, such as Windows XP workstations or Terminal servers. It's replacement (Adagio Checks) is a fully 32-bit application with a better database interface, and the reports use a newer version of the Crystal Reports print engine.