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Home/ Questions/Q 984057
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T04:57:15+00:00 2026-05-16T04:57:15+00:00

I’m writing a program that needs a generic temp folder. I’m trying to find

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I’m writing a program that needs a generic temp folder. I’m trying to find details about the Windows Temp folders. There are two paths that I know about –

  1. In each user directory under AppData\Local\Temp\
    This may change depending Windows version?

  2. In the system folder under Temp\ (C:\Windows\Temp)

I’m wondering exactly what Windows does to each of these. If Windows deletes files from either location, when does it do so? How can/should I use these directories for my programming?

EDIT: I have a bigger problem actually – Because of a certain engine I’m running indirectly with my program, which uses files I’m creating in a temp directory, I need a temp directory that doesn’t use whitespace characters in the path. Java’s System.getProperty(“java.io.tmpdir”) on Windows gives me the temp that’s in the user directory, which on XP is under “Documents and Settings…”
Not good. Any suggestions? This is why I’m wondering about the C:\Windows\Temp\ directory…

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T04:57:16+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 4:57 am

    Not quite. There is a user and system folder, the default location of which varies according the windows version, system folder name, and indeed in older versions of windows was the same for both the user and system case. However, these defaults can be over-ridden (they are on the system I’m using now, where they aren’t on the same drive as the system folder).

    The locations are stored in system variables. Some frameworks (.NET, VB6 and no doubt others) give you convient ways to find the paths rather than having to look up the system variable (e.g. System.IO.Path.GetTempPath in .NET).

    Windows does not clean up the temporary folder for you (which is why it’s worth blasting out old files it every few months on your own machine), it’s up to you to play nice. Create a file or files unlikely to step on the names any other software is using (they should take care to do the same, and so any name should do, but it’s always good to assume the worse of other code on the system), and delete files when you’re done (or on application exit at least).

    In .NET System.IO.Path.GetTempFileName() will create a new file in the temp area and return the name of it to you, that is reasonably guaranteed not to conflict with others’ so use that or similar methods if you can.

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