![]() You can ignore it, but it's a PITA, I know. Apple macOS 12.x (Monterey), Apple macOS 11.x (Big Sur), Apple macOS 10.15.x (Catalina), Apple macOS 10.14.x (Mojave), Apple macOS 10.13.x (High Sierra). Installing an application distributes many files throughout your System using space of your Hard Drive unnecessarily. AppCleaner is a small application which allows you to thoroughly uninstall unwanted apps. Now that Apple is actively warning about 32 bit applications, when it comes across one of these leftovers and sees it as 32 bit, it throws up that warning. Catalina Mojave High Sierra Sierra Yosemite El Capitan Mavericks Mountain Lion Lion Snow Leopard Tiger All. Sorry this is so complicated but when programs are not removed with uninstallers they came with or with a cleaner like AppCleaner, they can leave behind debris. If the find was just like mine, a combination of letters that just so happened to be leap, they are definitely not to be deleted. If all you got was Leap, that's probably not a good idea to delete unless you KNOW beyond any uncertainty that it's associated with Leap Frog. In the list of 21, if the name includes Leap and Frog, it's probably safe to remove. If you don't know which application it was, your work is harder. Or use any uninstaller that came with the Leap Frog Application, if it did. Certaines dentre-elles devront tre rinstalles. I prefer to use AppCleaner to find all traces of an app and. La liste ci-dessous vous indique, de faon non exhaustive, les applications compatibles avec macOS Mojave. The App Store has a large graphic and introduction on the left and a single column of extensions on the right. If you DO know which it was, the best way to proceed is to get AppCleaner, an application that cleans up debris left from uninstalls, then reinstall the Leap Frog app that had been installed and finally use AppCleaner to uninstall it. Select this menu option in the latest Safari and macOS Mojave and instead of a website appearing, the Mac App Store opens and displays the Safari Extensions section. Your problem is that unless you know which one it was, you have no way to know what it may have installed on your system. This link: Connect Your LeapFrog Learning Device | LeapFrog is to a page at Leap Frog where I suspect one or more of these applications has been installed at some point in the past. What it found was things like "Incompatib leApplications Strings.strings" and "SP_PresetMobi leAppDoc.png" which have string in the middle of them for "leap" that I have highlighted. I used EasyFind on my Mojave system and it found 74 matches and I've NEVER had any Leap Frog app on it. I did not expect that many, to be honest, so I would say NO to that question until more research can be done.
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