in referece to brian telling you that you can not delete the win386.swp file. Well he is wrong check the size of it, and then delete it, you will free up all that space. Windows will create a new one with out you even knowing it. thanks Neo
lol.
you've got a couple of errors there.
your ability to delete the file depends entirely on the operating system and if the OS has the file locked.
And, typically the file cannot be deleted, period. Its safer to assume it cant, than it can. Win16 it would work, Win32 it normally doesnt, its locked and protected. Ive yet to see a situation where it can be deleted under Win32. ;-)