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Does anybody know how to get rid of the annoying "Working on it ..." Message in the Windows 10 File Explorer.

It stays there (on the right side) for a few seconds to many seconds when opening the file explorer.

OS Window 10
System Partition SSD
All other files which are used often are also on a SSD
(only one HDD for bigger files which are also not used often, exists)

So showing recent files should really be fast. Also I do not mind if there is an option to deactivate this feature.

enter image description here

6
  • Hi, Is this happening for any folder or only Quick access view in particular?
    – w32sh
    Commented Jun 2, 2016 at 11:00
  • go in the settings app and stop real time protection of Windows defender. is it faster now? Commented Jun 2, 2016 at 14:48
  • @w32sh This is happening when using the short-cut "Windows Key" and "E" to open the Windows File Explorer. It takes especially long after a reboot. But sometimes also a few seconds if the Explorer was used already. Commented Jun 3, 2016 at 7:46
  • @magicandre1981 thx for the hint, I do not what to do that. But I'm gonna test if this is cause and will let you know. Commented Jun 3, 2016 at 7:47
  • 1
    Open Folder Options > Set "Open File Explorer" to "This PC" Try WinKey + E now. If it opens fine, then problem is with Quick access caches.
    – w32sh
    Commented Jun 3, 2016 at 8:42

14 Answers 14

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Open Folder Options > Set "Open File Explorer" to "This PC". Try WinKey + E now. If it opens fine, then the problem is with Quick access cache, which can be cleared by deleting the file f01b4d95cf55d32a.automaticDestinations-ms from the following directory, using Command Prompt.

%AppData%\Microsoft\Windows\Recent\AutomaticDestinations

Note: The above procedure clears your Quick access links. You'll have to manually add the links again.

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  • 1
    Works like a charm :) Commented Jun 6, 2016 at 9:43
  • 2
    My PC still had the problem after setting the folder options to "This PC", but deleting the cache files still solved the problem! Thank you!!
    – lordjeb
    Commented Aug 31, 2016 at 2:03
  • 1
    My downloads folder was doing this exclusively. Drove me nutters. Deleted, it instantly recreated a couple of files, and wham! My downloads folder instantly refreshed showing my files. Thank you so much! Commented Mar 8, 2018 at 9:34
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    I had a lot of Quick Access folders in my Explorer, after deleting those files they are all gone. Please update your answer to include the fact that all your links will be gone after this step!
    – gonutz
    Commented Nov 15, 2019 at 8:37
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    @gonutz : Thanks. I've added a note below the answer.
    – w32sh
    Commented Nov 15, 2019 at 16:05
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In my case, a couple of folder locations on remote file systems had found their way into the quick-access cache. These remote systems had become inaccessible, so my Windows Explorer was waiting for them to time out before rendering.

Deleting them from the Quick Access panel did the trick for me.

Another thing you can do, especially if you have lots of filetypes Microsoft recognizes in your download folder (stuff like jpg, docx, xlsx, etc):

Right click on your Downloads folder and choose Properties. Click the Customize tab. Choose Optimize this Folder for .... General Items. Click "also apply this setting to subfolders." Click OK.

Repeat for your Documents folder.

This will let the Windows Explorer handle your files without trying to generate snapshot images for your files.

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    Worked for me, windows 10 pro 2019
    – Buchannon
    Commented Sep 23, 2019 at 3:49
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Short version, the Windows Search service and the Windows Index are having issues.

Launch Control Panel and launch Indexing Options.

Click the Advanced button and you should see an error saying that there is no index.

Click the button to Rebuild the Index and give it 10 seconds and you’re done !!!!

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  • Rebuilding the index fixed it for me. Commented May 21, 2018 at 10:29
  • Fixed it for me. My WSearch service refused to start, but after setting it to DelayedAutoStart, running error checking on my system drive, and restarting, things are back to normal. My icon cache was also broken, which might be a related symptom. Commented Jun 12, 2018 at 4:03
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The only thing I found to work was opening a folder (not from the one in the taskbar, but one on the desktop or other means). Below are those steps for Windows 10 Pro:

  1. Open a folder
  2. On toolbar go to View -> Options (far right) -> Change Folder and Search Options
  3. Under Privacy click Clear next to Clear File Explorer History Screenshot

  4. Click OK and close the folder. Now open the folder from the taskbar.

THIS RESOLVES THE ISSUE SINCE A FILE THAT IS STORED FOR QUICKACCESS MAY NOT BE ACCESSIBLE.

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    Unfortunately this doesn't work when Explorer is "Working on it...", because the Options button on the View tab is disabled.
    – Ian Boyd
    Commented Jul 13, 2018 at 22:49
  • I tried manually clearing the AutomaticDestinations folder and setting the Quick Access to This PC. Pressing the Clear button on Folder Options is what finally fixed it for me. Thanks! Commented Nov 18, 2018 at 18:03
  • it works but after i restart the computer it happens again... any permanent solution to this? Commented May 5, 2020 at 16:13
  • You can access this dialog only when you have a working explorer. So if your explorer already doesn't start normally, you have to trick it into opening some other folder on your disk, then immediately go the this dialog. Commented Jul 14, 2020 at 12:04
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I found a solution for this problem on another site. Just right click on the folder with the problem and go to properties. There switch to Customize tab and set the option "Optimize folder for:" to General items. Worked like a charm :)

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    Worked for me. My case was a secondary non-OS D: drive that was full of video files. It was optimized for "Videos" and I changed it to "General Items" and that fixed it. Sidenote: I tried the above changes and those did not work so this might be the best case for non-primary drives. Thanks Kadju!
    – Befall
    Commented Nov 3, 2018 at 2:40
  • Yes! This made my downloads folder MUCH faster to open. Thank you!
    – Simon E.
    Commented Dec 31, 2021 at 0:45
1

I found that if, after I tried to open windows explorer the first time and it hung, I could right click the explorer and open a second windows explorer (while the first one was still hung) it opened fine. I then closed the hung one and used the second. This is only a temporary fix. Right now I'm doing the Re-Indexing under Indexing Options to see if this fixes it.

Ok... the re-indexing fixed it (at least for now)

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  • Opening the second window works for me, but re-indexing does not.... so +1 for at least getting a working explorer .... wish I could -1 Windows, though ;-) Other solutions on this page have not helped me at all (yet).
    – rolfl
    Commented Oct 19, 2021 at 12:10
0

I had the same issues. It turned out to be onedrive causing the problem. I fixed by right clicking onedrive icon in tray, and then clicking "unlink this PC". Once that was done, everything worked again, including thumbnails and folder options, and the 'working on it' hang up was gone as well

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I had this issue. It only affected one user. I had previously changed my wife's 'Pictures,Music,Documents' etc folders locations to a drive that was no longer connected. Once I remapped them to a location that was valid it cleared up instantly.

1
  • Are you saying this is the only problem that can cause the symptoms described, or is this just something to try? If it's just something to try, it isn't an answer ans should be a comment.
    – Blackwood
    Commented Nov 23, 2017 at 4:55
0

the answer of Win32Guy worked for me, but the location was slightly different:

%AppData%\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Recent Items\CustomDestinations

i deleted all the files in this folder and the problem was fixed.

0

Even after following the suggestions in the other answers my explorer kept being slow. My specific issue was the recently used files - because many of them were on network drives.

I've simply disabled the recent files-part.

  1. Right click Quick Access
  2. Click Options
  3. Remove the marking in Show recently used files in Quick access
  4. Click OK
0

What worked for me was deleting all of the files from the problematic folder (Downloads). Since I had Git Bash installed, I was able to run:

cd ~/Downloads
rm -rf *

If you don't have Git Bash, you can do:

  1. Press Windows-R
  2. Enter cmd
  3. Enter cd Downloads. Make sure this is successful before going to the next step.
  4. Enter dir to see the files in the current directory. Don't go on to the next step until you are sure you are in the right place and don't mind losing these files.
  5. Enter rd /s /q . This removes all the files and subdirectories in the current directory.

The last command should give the error: The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process. That just means it didn't delete the directory you were in.

Of course, if your problem is in a different directory, cd there. In any case, make absolutely sure you are in the correct directory before running rm or rd.

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    Thanks for the suggestion Ellen, but I don't think most people want to delete all their files as a solution to the problem.
    – Simon E.
    Commented Dec 31, 2021 at 0:46
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None of the above solutions worked for me, but my fix was really simple: Move the predefined location of the Downloads folder:

Right-click the Downloads folder and choose Properties

Download properties

Now click Move, create a new folder for the existing downloaded files to move to. For example, I created one called DownloadTemp

Move to a new folder

Now click Select folder then click OK on the following dialog box:

Move to a new folder

enter image description here

The files will be moved to the new location and the problem will hopefully be solved. You can either leave your downloads in this new location or reverse the process to put them back in the original Downloads folder.

I hope this works for you.

-1

After a recent install of 10 on my P.C., the File Explorer view tab had sections that were greyed out, and I couldn’t preview any photos. The thumbnails and icon just would never come up. So, I searched and searched and attempted all of the solutions found…..but nothing. Until one day I started the Task Manager and saw a reset button on the lower right side of the window. I highlighted file explorer, hit the reset button and like magic, my thumbnails, icons and view settings appeared. This is the only fix I found. If it doesn’t work on the first try, just do it again; it usually doesn’t take more than three attempts.

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  • Welcome to Super User! On this Q&A site we try to provide good answers to questions people ask. Part of writing a good answer is making sure people can easily find the core of it. Please reformat your answer so that it is clear what exactly the solution is. Please also add some more detail on where you found the button, because it doesn't seem to be available without opening some menu.
    – Cas
    Commented Nov 11, 2016 at 16:05
-1

What I did was

  1. hold down the Left shift key, right-click on the File Explorer Icon, and select Properties. Image for step 1
  2. Select the Shortcut Tab at the top
  3. Change the contents of the Run drop-down from "Normal Window" to "Maximized" Image for step 3

This worked for me, I hope it helps others

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    Does this really remove the "Working on it..." message? This only tells explorer to open in a maximized window, doesn't it?
    – Vylix
    Commented Jul 1, 2017 at 12:41

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