When you install Microsoft Office 2000, you may receive the
following error message:
Internal error 2336: Please
Contact Product Support for assistance.
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Microsoft Office 2000 Setup cannot access your temporary
files folder ("Temp folder"). The cause of this problem may be one of the
following:
| • | The Temp folder is missing or invalid. |
| • | You have insufficient permissions to the Temp folder on a
computer that runs Microsoft Windows NT and the NTFS file system. |
| • | There are too many temporary files in the Temp
folder. |
The typical path for the temporary files folder is
C:\Windows\Temp for Microsoft Windows 95 and Microsoft Windows 98, and C:\Temp
for Windows NT.
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To resolve this problem, use the appropriate methods for
your situation.
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Confirm the Temp Folder Is Valid
In Windows 95 or Windows 98
If you are using Windows 95 or Windows 98, follow these steps to
confirm that your temp folder is valid:
| 1. | Restart your computer to a command prompt.
In
Windows 95, press F8 when you see the "Starting Windows 95" message, and then
select Safe Mode Command Prompt Only on the Startup menu.
In Windows 98, restart your
computer, hold down CTRL after your computer completes the Power On Self Test
(POST), and then select Safe Mode Command Prompt Only on the startup menu. |
| 2. | Type set and press ENTER. Note the
location of the TEMP variable. |
| 3. | Change to the folder noted in step 2. For example, if TEMP
is set to C:\Windows\Temp, type the following line and then press ENTER: cd \windows\temp |
| 4. | Delete any temporary files in this folder. Temporary files
typically have a .tmp extension. To delete these files, type the following line
and then press ENTER: del *.tmp |
| 5. | Move any remaining files to another temporary folder. To
move these files, type each of the following lines, and press ENTER after each
line:
cd \
md tempbak
cd tempbak
copy c:\windows\temp\*.*
cd \
cd \windows\temp
del *.*
Press Y and then press ENTER to confirm deleting the
files.
Note You should not delete these files from within the Windows
graphical user interface (GUI) because Windows or a Windows-based program may
be using one of these files.
|
| 6. | Restart your computer. |
In Microsoft Windows NT 4.0
If you are using Microsoft Windows NT 4.0, follow these steps to
confirm that your temp folder is valid:
| 1. | Click Start, point to Settings, and then click Control Panel. |
| 2. | In Control Panel, double-click the System icon. When the System Properties dialog box appears, click the Environment tab. This tab lists the current System and User variables. Look
under the User variables for the TEMP and TMP environment variable settings.
Ensure that the folders referenced by these variables exist and have valid
folder names. Also ensure that the hard disk on which the folders are located
has at least 3 megabytes (MB) of free hard disk space and that you have
read/write permissions to those folders. |
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Confirm Permissions to the Temp Folder on Windows NT
Make sure you have Full Control permissions to the \TEMP folder
if your operating system is Windows NT.
| 1. | In Windows NT Explorer, right-click the \Temp folder, and
then click Properties. |
| 2. | Click the Security tab. |
| 3. | Click Permissions. |
| 4. | At this point, you are viewing the list of users and groups
and their permissions. Make sure that you have Full Control permissions as a
member of a group or explicitly. If not, click Add to add yourself to the list, or click Full Control in the Type of Access list for the appropriate
user or group. See your Windows NT documentation for more
information. |
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If None of These Resolutions Work
If the previous methods do not resolve the problem, create a
verbose log file and contact Microsoft Technical Support. To create the verbose
log file during Setup, type the following command line:
path\setup.exe /l*v c:\Officelog.txt
The above command line creates the verbose log file Officelog.txt
on the root of drive C. You can specify any path and file name for this log
file.
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