Microsoft Visual C++ Redistributable bundles are bits of programming which go about as “library” documents.
This intends that in the event that a program wishes to incorporate a particular kind of usefulness, the engineer can just incorporate different documents from a particular VC++ form, as opposed to coding it up themselves.
Hence, when you utilize specific games, applications or different elements of Windows, the facts may confirm that odd blunders show up.
One such mistake is the “MSVCP100.dll is missing” issue:
The program can’t begin in light of the fact that MSVCP100.dll is absent from your PC
The reason for the blunder, as referenced, is the “MSVCP100.dll” record is absent from your PC.
This document is important for the VC++ Redistributable 2010 bundle (MS = Microsoft, VCP = Visual C PlusPlus, 100 = rendition) dll files all in one.
While you might have the bundle introduced, frequently the case its DLL documents are either absent, defiled or overwritten.
To fix the issue, you want to guarantee that the MSVCP100.dll document is back on your framework.
This should be possible by following the means underneath…
Arrangement
1. Reinstall VC++ 2010
The initial step is to re-introduce VC++ 2010.
This is a free cycle and can be gotten to utilizing the accompanying advances:
In Windows 7, click on “Begin” > “Control Board” > “Projects and Highlights”
In Windows 10, right-click on the “Begin” button > select “Applications and Highlights”
Look down to any reference to “Microsoft Visual C++ Redistributable”
Overlook any posting other than the 2010 adaptation
Click on the posting and select “Uninstall”
Restart your PC
In the wake of restarting, click onto the Web and search for “Visual C++ 2010 download”
You ought to find a Microsoft page as the main connection
Click onto it and snap the orange “Download” button
Allow the application to download
Run the installer
Follow its means
After it introduces, restart your PC
This will have re-introduced the VC++ 2010 bundle overall, subsequently supplanting the MSVCP100.dll document on your framework.
Assuming you attempt the application once more, it ought to work this time. In the event that not, move onto the subsequent stages.
2. Reinstall Any Application Causing The Blunder
In the event that the above doesn’t work, it by and large implies that you generally dislike a specific application.
The method for fixing this is to basically reinstall the application setting off the blunder, which is extremely straightforward:
In Windows 7, click on “Begin” > “Control Board” > “Projects/Highlights”
In Windows 10, right-click on “Begin” > select “Applications and Highlights”
Find the application you wish to re/un introduce
Uninstall it
Restart your framework
Introduce a new duplicate of the application once more
As referenced, the explanation this works is on the grounds that numerous applications attempt and supplant the MSVCPxxx.dll documents on your framework.
Reinstalling the application ought to fix the mistake for you.
3. Physically Supplant MSVCP100.dll
On the off chance that you actually have no karma, you really want to supplant the MSVCP100.dll record physically on your framework.
To do this, you really want to find a rendition of the record on the web (which is unreasonably easy) and supplant it:
Search online for “MSVCP100.dll download”
Select the principal connect which shows up (or search for DLLMe.com)
Download the document to your framework
Peruse to C:/Windows/System32
Extricate the record into that envelope
When this is finished, press “Windows” + “R” keys on your console
Type “cmd” and press “Enter”
Into the black box which shows up, type “regsvr32 msvcp100.dll”
Press “Enter”
When this finishes, restart your framework
Attempt your application once more
This ought to furnish the application with the document it requires. Whether it fixes the issue, we’ll need to see.
4. Wipe Out Vault Mistakes
Finally, clearing out any vault blunders might furnish the framework with the capacity to peruse its DLL records once more.
What the vast majority don’t know is simply the “vault” (which is the focal data set for Windows – answerable for putting away every one of the settings for your framework) stores an enormous rundown of accessible DLL documents – and their areas.
The issue for most frameworks is that this data set/rundown can frequently become harmed, keeping your applications from finding the document.
To fix it, you can “clean” the vault…
You really want to download a “vault more clean” application
CCleaner is the main device that merits utilizing in 2018; there are others, yet CCleaner is the most trusted (and it’s free)
From here, you really want to run the program and let it check all your vault documents/blunders
Assuming that it finds any, let it clean them
Restart your framework
Attempt the application once more