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I was wondering about the difference between \ and / in file paths. I have noticed that sometimes a path contains /and sometimes it is with \.

It would be great if anyone can explain when to use \ and /.

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    Difference in what context? A webby context? Escaping in C# strings? It is tagged with ASP.NET. Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 17:22
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    How are c# and asp.net related to the question?
    – Oriol
    Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 21:46
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    This question may have the better answers, but there's no answer (mine included) here that's not already mentioned in stackoverflow.com/questions/1589930/…
    – Ash
    Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 0:19
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    @nocomprende, Peter recommended closing this as a duplicate of the older one (21h ago). This question attracted better, more comprehensive answers than the older one, so other users decided to close the older question as a duplicate of the newer one (5h ago). It's unusual, but not unheard of.
    – zzzzBov
    Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 14:40
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    @zzzzBov why was this one not simply redirected to the older one and the better answers placed there? I don't like a system where a question I ask could be closed in the far future as a "duplicate" of something that happened later on. At least call it something more descriptive, like "superseded" rather than duplicate. The original "one" cannot be a duplicate of anything, it is the only one.
    – user4624979
    Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 15:04

7 Answers 7

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/ is the path separator on Unix and Unix-like systems. Modern Windows can generally use both \ and / interchangeably for file paths, but Microsoft has advocated for the use of \ as the path separator for decades.

This is done for historical reasons that date as far back as the 1970s, predating Windows by over a decade. In the beginning, MS-DOS (the foundation to early Windows) didn't support directories. Unix had directory support using the / character since the beginning. However, when directories were added in MS-DOS 2.0, Microsoft and IBM were already using the / character for command switches, and because of DOS's lightweight parser (descended from QDOS and designed to run on lower end hardware), they chose to use a new character rather than risk breaking compatibility with their existing applications.

So, to avoid errors about "missing a switch" or "invalid switch" when passing file paths as arguments to commands such as these:

cd/                        <---- no switch specified
dir folder1/folder2        <---- /folder2 is not a switch for dir

it was decided that the \ character would be used instead, so you could write those commands like this

cd\
dir folder1\folder2

without error.

Later, Microsoft and IBM collaborated on an operating system unrelated to DOS called OS/2. OS/2 had the ability to use both separators, probably to attract more Unix developers. When Microsoft and IBM parted ways in 1990, Microsoft took what code they had and created Windows NT, on which all modern versions of Windows are based, carrying this separator agnosticism with it.


As backward compatibility has been the name of the game for Microsoft from all of the major OS transitions that they've undertaken (DOS to Win16/DOS, to Win16/Win32, to Win32/WinNT), this peculiarity stuck, and it will probably exist for a while yet.

It's for this reason that this discrepancy exists. It should really have no effect on what you're doing because, like I said, the Windows API can generally use them interchangeably. However, 3rd party applications (and even many of Microsoft's own for legacy reasons) may break if you pass a / when they expect a \ between directory names. If you're using Windows, stick with \. If you're using Unix or URIs (which have their foundation in Unix paths, but that's another story entirely), then use /.

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    And always combine paths using Path.Combine.
    – Cheng Chen
    Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 5:54
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    Interesting. So under DOS or Windows, foo.exe /bar might be interpreted as a command-line switch, while foo.exe \bar might be interpreted as referring to a file/folder called bar which is located in the root directory \ of the current "drive", like C:\ for example. Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 9:05
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    It should be noted that this normalisation from / to \ is done in the Win32 compat layer, meaning that if you circumvent it, there will be a difference. The best known example of this are extended length paths: \\?\C:\ will work as expected on NTFS but \\?\C:/ won't.
    – Voo
    Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 10:13
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    @PC Luddite: That WinAPI can handle both / and ` is not entirely true. For network path you have to use ` (eg. \\<servername> bot not //<servername>)
    – raznagul
    Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 10:13
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    @raznagul True. I didn't really mention network paths in my answer. I stuck mainly with the common filepath type. I'll add that.
    – PC Luddite
    Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 18:16
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MS-DOS 1.0 retained the command line option (or switch) character convention of '/' from CP/M. At that time there was no directory structure in the file system and no conflict.

When Microsoft developed the more Unix like environment with MS-DOS (and PC-DOS) 2.0, they needed to represent the path separator using something that did not conflict with existing command line options. Internally, the system works equally well with either '/' or '\'. The command processor (and many applications) continued to use the '/' as a switch character.

A CONFIG.SYS entry SWITCHAR=- could be used to override the / default to improve Unix compatibility. This makes built in commands and standard utilities use the alternate character. The Unix path separator could then be unambiguously used for file and directory names. This entry was removed in later versions, but a DOS call was documented to set the value after booting.

This was little used and most third-party tools remained unchanged. The confusion persists. Many ports of Unix tools retain the '-' switch character while some support both conventions.

The follow-on PowerShell command processor implements rigorous escaping and switch parameters and largely avoids the confusion except where legacy tools are used.

Neither the question nor the answer relate to C#.

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    As a historical note, the use of / as an option introducer in various PDP-11 operating system such as RSTS (1970) and RSX (1972) precedes that in CP/M (1973).
    – PJTraill
    Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 20:09
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  • A URL, standardized in RFC 1738, always uses forward slashes, regardless of platform.
  • A file path and a URI are different. \ is correct in a Windows file path and / is correct in a URI.
  • Several browsers (namely, Firefox & Opera) fail catastrophically when encountering URIs with backslashes.
  • System.IO.Path.DirectorySeparatorChar to get current path separator

This can be relevant resource.

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    Fail catastrophically? Firefox translates \​​ to / automatically. In my book this is called "works seamlessly".
    – Kroltan
    Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 11:31
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    my house caught on fire the last time I used \ in Firefox Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 13:27
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    @CarstenS, Firefox does not convert backslash to forward slash in URL automaticaly and does not open the link. This add-on corrects the URL with backslash and open page. addons.mozilla.org/en-US/seamonkey/addon/…
    – Sami
    Commented Jul 20, 2016 at 6:58
  • What exactly do you mean by "fail catastrophically"? What happens? Does the browser crash and exit? Commented Sep 11, 2016 at 18:36
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On Unix-based systems \ is an escape character, that is, \ tells the parser that this is a space and not the end of the statement. On Unix systems / is the directory separator.

On Windows \ is the directory separator, but the / cannot be used in file or directory names.

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    \ and / (as well several other symbols) can't be used in filenames because DOS didn't have the same complex parser that Unix users are so used to. The lack of a good parser was the result of MS-DOS being descended from QDOS ("Quick and Dirty Operating System"). It was meant to get things running quickly and on limited hardware. All this of course still exists in the present day for backward compatibility.
    – PC Luddite
    Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 6:10
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    well, worth mentioning that in later Windows versions the / was added as an "Alternate_Directory_Separator"
    – Tomer W
    Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 18:23
  • @PCLuddite maybe we should be thinking of forward compatibility instead?
    – user4624979
    Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 20:35
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    @nocomprende What about filepaths are incompatable? Incompatable with what? And like I said before, saving "a few DOS apps" (which was really more like thousands) from breaking was really important to consumers at the time. It's what made Microsoft successful today and Unix (and all others really) start on the decline (even if there's been a resurgence in the last decade). I fail to see how that's not looking at it with common sense.
    – PC Luddite
    Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 15:15
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    @nocomprende And your argument about filepaths not being standardized is completely void. They're standardized on Windows, and they're standardized on Unix. If you're talking about a cross-platform standard, that's not really that useful or easy to implement. Who's to say that one standard is really "better" than another?
    – PC Luddite
    Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 15:40
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You shouldn't be using either in C#. You should always use the Path class. This contains a method called Path.Combine that can be used to create paths without specifying the separator yourself.

Example usage:

string fullPath = System.IO.Path.Combine("C:", "Folder1", "Folder2", "file.txt");
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  • But what if you provide a path in appsettings.json to load a file during runtime?
    – Jim Aho
    Commented Sep 26, 2023 at 9:42
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Apart from the answers given, it is worth mentioning that \ is widely used for special characters (such as \n \t) in programming languages, text editors and general systems that apply lexical analysis.

If you are programming for instance, it is inconvenient at times to need to even need to escape backslash with another one (\\) in order to use it properly - or need to use escaping strings, such as C# @"\test".

Of course, as mentioned before, web URIs use forward slash by standard but both slashes work in the latest and most common command line tools.

UPDATE: After searching a little bit, it seems out the whole story between / and \ goes back in "computer history", in the ages of DOS and the Unix-based systems at that time. HowToGeek has an interesting article about this story.

In short terms, DOS 1.0 was initially released by IBM with no directory support, and / was used for another ("switching") command functionality. When directories were introduced in 2.0 version, / was already in use, so IBM chose the visually closest symbol, which was \. On the other hand, Unix standardly used / for directories.

When users started to use many different systems, they started becoming confused, making the OS developers to attempt making the systems work in both cases - this even applies in the part of URLs, as some browsers support the http:\\www.test.com\go format. This had drawbacks though in general, but the whole thing stands today still for backward compartibility causes, with an attempt for support of both slashes on Windows, even though they are not based on DOS anymore.

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  • "both slashes work in file system paths." is incorrect, because Unix is pretty angry when you use ` as well as many make` shells... you are right that recent Windows have defined the ALTERNATE_PATH_SEPARATOR environment variable which defaults to / hence Windows can probably accept both.
    – Tomer W
    Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 18:27
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    @TomerW Windows NT has always been POSIX-compatible (though early POSIX was a mess anyway, and some of it stuck in Windows for backwards compatibility). That included supporting / paths everywhere in the system - of course, applications could misunderstand those paths at their leisure, so it wasn't used too much. Non-CLI applications that didn't try to do their own (broken) validation of paths worked fine from the get go.
    – Luaan
    Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 11:55
  • @Luaan Windows had the ability to support many POSIX features, but I would hardly say it was "POSIX-compatible". Sure, there were a few POSIX subsystems one could use over the years, but those were far from ideal. Windows 10 will be supporting Ubuntu bash though later this summer along with native support for the Linux tools that come with Ubuntu, so you may be able to argue that in the future, but you certainly can't say "always".
    – PC Luddite
    Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 15:25
  • @Luaan Unless by "compatible" you mean "cygwin works".
    – PC Luddite
    Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 15:27
  • @PCLuddite No, it was 100% POSIX.1c compatible. That doesn't mean that all unix applications work on it - most unix applications are not POSIX compliant :)
    – Luaan
    Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 17:42
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\ is used for Windows local file paths and network paths as in:

C:\Windows\Temp\ or \\NetworkSharedDisk\Documents\Archive\

/ is what is required by standard URIs as in:

http://www.stackoverflow.com/

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    @NikhilVartak, I've added examples although I thought my initial answer addressed all of the OP's questions.
    – Ash
    Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 4:40
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    Windows also recognizes / in paths (at least 7 does).
    – Kenneth K.
    Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 11:58
  • This answer is far from complete. Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 14:11
  • Were you meant to link to some resources, besides just the Stack Overflow main page?
    – Tas
    Commented Jul 18, 2016 at 21:51
  • @reinierpost, my answer is based on the OP's question and the associated tags. Like few of the other answers here, I could copy something from stackoverflow.com/questions/1589930/… and paste it here but it seemed excessive. @tas, I intended to link to stackoverflow page or any website hyperlink to illustrate use of / in standarad URIs as I've stated in the answer.
    – Ash
    Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 0:14

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