So that you understand the problem, your active folder is the one where mIRC.ini is located. In recent versions, unless you manually put it in your mIRC installation folder, it will appear in your application data folder (it gives you the path to it in the error message). What that means for you is that you have to specify the path directly to the script folder whenever you try to manually load the script. You can also just open the Remotes tab (Alt-R) and choose File > Load and select it. If you prefer to keep your scripts in a subdirectory of the mIRC installation folder, then your best option is to place mIRC.ini into your installation folder. That will make your active dir be the installation folder instead of the application data folder. Note that the reason mIRC uses the application data folder is because it multiple user accounts (in windows) use mIRC with their own settings and scripts. Of course, if no one else uses your computer, all of that separation is useless for you.


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