Sources of GVS Problems
Issues Opening GVS Files
GuitarVision Player is Not Installed
You encounter an error message such as "%%os%% Can't Open GVS Files" when trying to open your GVS. Usually, this is because you do not have GuitarVision Player for %%os%% installed. This will prevent you from double-clicking to open the GVS file because the OS doesn’t know how to handle it.
Tip: When another GVS application is installed, you can choose to open it by selecting "Show Apps" and using that program.
Wrong Version of GuitarVision Player is Installed
Sometimes your installed version of GuitarVision Player won't support your GuitarVision Song File file. Installing the latest version of GuitarVision Player from Open Source is recommended. The primary cause of this problem is that your GuitarVision Song File file was created by a different (newer) version of GuitarVision Player than what's installed.
Tip: If you right-click on your GVS file, then select "Properties" (Windows) or "Get Info" (Mac), you can obtain hints about what version you need.
Regardless, most of the GVS file opening problems relate to not having the right version of GuitarVision Player installed.
More Causes of Problems Opening GVSs
Although you might already have GuitarVision Player or another GVS-associated software installed on your computer, you can still encounter problems opening GuitarVision Song File files. Other GVS opening errors can be created by other system problems inside of %%os%%. Issues that aren't software-related:
- GVS file type Registry entries are wrong
- The GVS file description within the Windows Registry was removed
- Corrupt install of GuitarVision Player or other GVS-related program
- Your GVS can't be loaded properly (file corruption)
- Malware-tainted GVS file can't be opened
- Device drivers of the hardware associated with your GVS file are corrupt or out-of-date
- Insufficient system resources to successfully open GuitarVision Song File files
Quiz: Which file extension is a type of raster image?
That's Correct!
TIFF files, or Tagged Image File Format, is a considered a raster image file. They are very popular with the publishing industry because of their ability to be compressed using lossless compression (maintaining high quality).
Close, but not quite...
TIFF files, or Tagged Image File Format, is a considered a raster image file. They are very popular with the publishing industry because of their ability to be compressed using lossless compression (maintaining high quality).