Can I delete the HF mig in the windows folder of the C drive?

Updated on technology 2024-05-16
19 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Clean up the C drive, temporary files, Internet records, etc.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Absolutely, the installation file left behind when Windows is updated, the blue one, dry it.

    All folders starting with $ are all files backed up by the system installing security patches, if you don't uninstall the patches, all files are useless, you can delete them at will. There may be about 1g when there are many.,It's estimated that the patch backup you use will change the location.。

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    It's a virus. $ntuninstallkb 873339$ is your system upgrade folder and can be deleted.

    And 87 88 90 91 93 94 95 must be a virus, you have to be in C:Windows

    or C:WindowsSystem to see if there is a process file for it. Run the command to view the process.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Can be deleted. It is some backup file of the system.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Can be deleted. These $hf-mig$ files that start and end with $ are the update files left behind after the system is updated so that Windows is not on the Internet when it is updated later**. To put it bluntly, it is a backup of the update file, there are many such files under the windows folder, deleted, nothing more than in the future when the upgrade file is damaged, in the next one on the network, besides, the upgrade of the east and east is rarely lost or damaged.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    This is the backup file before the Windows system update.

    Also, the file that is surrounded by $$ can be completely deleted, which is absolutely the right thing to do.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    $ntuninstallkb 890046$ is the backup file after the system upgrade patch, which can be deleted if the patch is not uninstalled in use.

    If the XPSP SP2 version is high, it will not be updated with its own QEF file, but will take out the spare one from Windows $hf Mig$ and update it. Now after the above explanation should be understood, it is best not to delete it casually Although deleting this folder will not cause the system to crash immediately, once the situation mentioned above occurs, there may be compatibility problems caused by the system file version mismatch after installing the new patch. So, don't delete the Windows $hf Mig$ folder lightly.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    OK! Just delete it.

    It is a file with "$" in front of the file name, which is a temporary file generated when installing the system and updating the system, and has no impact on the system after deletion.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    OK! This is an uninstaller left over from service pack 2 and various patches, if you don't want to uninstall any patches, just right-click to delete these files.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    It can be deleted without any impact.

    The hf mig$ folder is the installation cache folder for system patches, which can be deleted when the installation is complete.

    All files with the $ symbol in the windows directory can be deleted, including folders.

    I deleted all of my own, and when I first deleted it, the average person's computer can delete more than 200+M, and the C drive saves these spaces.

    There will be no error in installing the patch in the future, I have used it for more than a year and there is no error, to say that the error is generally a registry information error, what does it have to do with an empty folder?

    Deleting all files with the $ symbol in the windows directory is an optimization, and the move to give the C drive ** :-)

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Any file or folder with a $ symbol is useless, and that is left behind when you reinstall the system.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Generally, it is the original program that is backed up after the system update, and it can be deleted! ~~

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    It's okay to delete it, it's the original file of the patch, it's already installed, it's useless.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    The hf mig$ folder is the installation cache folder for system patches, which can be deleted when the installation is complete.

    All files with the $ symbol in the windows directory can be deleted, if you dare not delete them.

    Just the next optimization software.

    Personally, I use Super Bunny.

    Now there are many optimization software, 360 QQ management, and there are many antivirus software with optimization functions.

    can delete these temporary files.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Yes, it is left over from the update patches, if the system has been upgraded with windoes updade, and those patches are not going to uninstall them again, then delete the following files:

    C: Windows starts with $hf....Hidden files at the beginning.

    There are also C: All files under the Windows Software Distribution Download, you can also delete them, they are the files that come down when you update!

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    Folders like the $ character that start and end can be deleted that is an anti-delete program for Windows.

    For example, if you patch your computer IE from IE6 to IE7, then a folder like this will appear under your C drive Windows, and it will be used to uninstall IE7 in the Add Removal Program if you don't need IE7 or need to go back to IE6 for some reason.

    The second problem: most of the windows files of the C drive are useful, do not move to other disks, because the default environment variables of the system refer to the windows folder of the C drive, if you move the windows folder to other disks without setting the environment variables, then it will cause many applications to be unusable or even affect the operation of the system.

    If you simply want your system disk to have more free space, it is recommended that you back up the important data in the machine, repartition it, allocate more space for the C drive, and then install the operating system in the C drive.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    You can move it with confidence, or delete it, and if it will affect the system, the system will prompt you.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    C: Windows $hf mig$ folder is a backup archive file for upgrades and patches, and it's okay to delete it, but don't delete it if you want to revert to the state before the patch was installed (usually no one will revert to the pre-patch version.)

    As long as it has the $$ symbol, it is a backup file for the system update and upgrade, including the content before the upgrade and the uninstall of the new upgraded program, which can be deleted without impact.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    After entering the system, you can't move the window at all!That's the core of the system! If you remove the cow, the computer won't be able to turn on!

    It's even more impossible to word! That file of yours is not a system file! Probably generated by other software!

    If it's not a virus, leave it alone.

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