In a domain environment, the roaming is used to copy the user's environment as they log on to different computers Why are there directories called local, locallow, and roaming under \users\<username>\appdata You can find a description in the windows file system namespace usage.
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I also tried defining my own user variable in edit environment variables for your account and defined locallowappdata
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. 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? 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.
To me very came in handy after learning it. User profiles are stored in user data directory and it vary depending on the operating system The easiest way is to navigate to chrome://version and look for the profile path field [profile path] c:\users\alice\appdata\local\google\chrome\user data\default [user data dir] c:\users\alice\appdata\local\google\chrome\user data
The appdata folder is located in a user's folder, eg C:\users\username\appdata, whereas the program files folder is located in c:\ the biggest difference here is permissions If you have just one user on your pc, then that user has all rights everywhere and it may not make sense But if you have multiple users, then it starts to make sense.
The folder under user\appdata\roaming does exist, and i can access it manually through windows explorer
However, the win + r method i described earlier doesn't work.