I'm checking the windows version in an installer (made with NSIS) by checking the following registry key:
HKLM "SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion" "CurrentVersion"
According to this post and this page from MSDN, the currentVersion number for Windows 10 should be 10.0.
I just installed the Windows 10 Pro Insider Preview and the version number given in the registry is still 6.3, instead of 10.10 as it should.
Is there another reliable way in registry to detect Windows 10?
There's also a human-readable string in the registry called "ProductName"
Try
Which gives me 10 and 1709.
See Peter Bright's article at https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2014/11/why-windows-10-isnt-version-6-any-more-and-why-it-will-probably-work/ for more insight on why you see the answers you do. As you already saw from @magicandre1981, the
CurrentMajorVersionNumber
key will give you the "10" you want. You can get 10.0 fromSystem.Environment.OSVersion
if the application manifest explicitly designates your app for Windows 10, as stated in the referenced article. Without it,Environment.OSVersion
will give you 6.2.9200, which is the same as Windows 8. So, your Windows 10 version is 10.0, 6.3, or 6.2, depending on how you ask the question.Instead of reading the value
CurrentVersion
, read the new valuesCurrentMajorVersionNumber
(which is 10) andCurrentMinorVersionNumber
(which is 0) under Windows 10. Those 2 keys are new in Windows 10 to detect Windows Version from Registry.