

Then when you start Fritzing the next time File->load->water-sensor.fzpz should load the water sensor in to your mine parts bin like this: If you don’t have anything you want to keep in the mine parts bin, then just delete the AppData\Fritzing\ and My Documents\Fritzing directories with Fritzing shut down.

I think the only thing that is going to work at this point is for you to clear the user directories. The Fritzing loader needs to put the files in the c: \ users \ username \ AppData \ Fritzing \ roaming \ Fritzing \ Fzz \ f6a13154ae2e0bd166565baf5f5fa552) or Fritzing won’t know that they are there.

So when I did that and loaded the sensor I got the message: unable to read the file.Ĭorrect, this won’t work. What I did is this: I exported the water sensor and put it in my own sketch folder (c: \ users \ username \ AppData \ Fritzing \ roaming \ Fritzing \ Fzz \ f6a13154ae2e0bd166565baf5f5fa552) because there is everything I need. If you have parts you want to keep in the mine parts bin, then you need to delete any of these files that are still in theĬ:\Users\owner\AppData\Roaming\Fritzing\fzzĭirectory like this to get rid of the temp directory files like this: If you don’t have any parts or sketches you want to keep you can just delete those two directories and Fritzing will recreate them, or you can move them aside by renaming them if you want to keep something in them. On Windows they are inĬ:\users\username\AppData\Fritzing\roaming\Fritzing (which is a hidden directory so you need to enable hidden directories in explorer) andĬ:\Users\username\My Documents\Fritzing (where username is your windows id) There are two user directories (with your parts and the parts database) which don’t get touched during an install (to not affect your sketches during upgrades). That done, If you don’t have any parts in the mine parts bin already that you want to keep, then this is the easy way to do what you need:

By default it will be “Don’t show hidden files” then click Apply.
