In a domain environment, the roaming is used to copy the user's environment as they log on to different computers There is another question on here that allows users to find the path to their current background image through a cmd command You can find a description in the windows file system namespace usage.
I would like to know the full list of variables that i can use in windows explorer or related relative paths that is accepted by windows 10
The temp folder is not always deleted, even after proper shutdowns, and the space can pile up to large proportions
You don't need to delete the folder itself though, only its content It will fail deleting everything and will complain that some files are in use Just say ignore for all occurrences. You'll need to complete a few actions and gain 15 reputation points before being able to upvote
Upvoting indicates when questions and answers are useful What's reputation and how do i get it Instead, you can save this post to reference later. My guess would be \appdata\local\temp, but keep in mind they may not be.txt files
Word for instance when doing autosaves generates.tmp files, so if notepad is using a similar mechanism then it may also be using a similar naming scheme.
22 the original user's profile directory lives in a directory like c:\users\username\appdata How can i refer to the current user's profile directory when using the windows command line By searching i found out about %userprofile% that perhaps refer to the current username, but it does not really work. I would just correct that what the op is asking about are not any special directories or shortcuts but regular environment variables
They may contain any numeric or alphanumeric value, some of them just contain filesystem paths I've just had to recover my profiles from a back copy because chrome data got corrupted and i didn't get them back until i restored the upper level folder, that is, c:\users\yourusernamehere\appdata\local\google\chrome\user data. Navigate to c:\users\username\appdata execute the following command Mklink /d local d:\appdata\local replace d:\appdata\local with the actual path of where you moved the appdata to
If you cannot move/delete the original copy, create a 2nd user, make it administrator, login with it, and retry the option
This should ensure that no files are in.