There you will see which version of Crystal Designer deployed that CRAXDRT.DLL. Open the source code project and look at the REFERENCES, get the name and GUID of the CRAXDRT.DLL ( or CRAXDDRT.DLL ) and then find exactly that entry in the registry. You need to determine specifically what version of Designer DLL is being invoked by the application that is running the report. If your current Crystal Developer tool wont open it, then it is from a newer one than you are using, or it is truly corrupted ( but since you say it is running well within an application then it's almost certainly not corrupted ). Ergo, to open and edit the file, you need the designer/editor for the version which produced that file, or else a newer designer/editor. rpt files could not be successfully opened by any version earlier than the version which last saved the file. In that era of Crystal Reports, version 10 would have been the current release.
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