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Home/ Questions/Q 974969
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T03:30:42+00:00 2026-05-16T03:30:42+00:00

For some very odd reason, my Visual Studio 2008, when trying to compile a

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For some very odd reason, my Visual Studio 2008, when trying to compile a C# project, tries to write the output of the executable to a directory with the same name as an executable, at least it seems that that’s what the error message implies. After running Compile on any of my projects, CSC.EXE reports the following compiler error:

Could not write to output file
‘D:\Projects\Examples\StringBuilderVsString\obj\Release\StringBuilderVsString.exe’
— ‘The directory name is invalid. ‘

When I look inside obj\Release or obj\Debug all intermediate resources, like StringBuilderVsString.pdb are correctly written in that directory. There are no spaces in the directory. The error happens also when running csc.exe from the command prompt.

When running Process Monitor, I only see SUCCESS for files accessed by csc.exe and I don’t see any querying or writing to locations that do no exist.

Any ideas on tackling this are welcome.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T03:30:42+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 3:30 am

    Solved! Thanks for the input, I meanwhile found a solution. The cause is rare, but it may happen to others, so I decided to answer my own question here:

    Cause

    An incorrect or inaccessible %TEMP% location, or an inaccessible %USERPROFILE% path.

    I had moved these paths to a faster SSD drive to speed up compiling. The drive crashed and the OS did not find it anymore (as reported on ServerFault here) and consequently, the moved locations (internet caches, my documents and temp) had become inaccessible.

    The error mentioned by Visual Studio is misleading: it has nothing to do with the name of the file (while I’m still wondering why it was querying the executable as a directory), the error was about the %TEMP% location being bad.

    Solution

    Fix the %USERPROFILE% or %TEMP% environment variables, (in case you forgot, it’s here: System > Advanced > Environment Variables).

    Note: The typical and default TEMP setting is to use the USERPROFILE environment variable as in the default %USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\Temp. This works, but only if in the registry, the key under HKCU\Environment\TEMP is of the type REG_EXPAND_SZ and not REG_SZ.

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