What does the Exclusions feature do?
It excludes a program/service from being scanned and repaired.
Why do I need to use this feature?
In some circumstances, you may notice that the registry repairs have affected the functionality of a program you use. This is because certain registry entries of that program were inadvertently detected as registry errors.
To prevent this from happening again, the Exclusion feature allows you to add specific registry entries that relate to the affected program. This ensures that the program is completely ignored during the scan and repair process of Registry Reviver.
You can also use the Exclusion feature to ignore repetitive blank or invalid registry entries that act as placeholders for a program and are regenerated every time.
What do I need to do?
Registry Reviver > Options > Exclusions > Add Entry
How do I add the registry entries?
Depending on how they are listed in the Windows Registry. You can use the Windows Registry Editor (regedit) to determine the exact paths.
For example:
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\ACDSee
(or)
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Software\ACDSee
Screenshots for reference:
How do I restore the errors I have ignored (excluded)?
You can do so, by accessing the Exclusion List of the program and manually deleting the required registry errors from the list you see. Once deleted, these errors will go back into your Windows Registry and appear in the next registry scan.