That is surprisingly false. Microsoft operating systems use both / and \ as a path separator, going all the way back to DOS.
Early versions of MS-DOS made it a user preference option in the command.com interpreter, whether the user wanted to use / for options and \ for path separation or vice versa.
Early versions of MS-DOS made it a user preference option in the command.com interpreter, whether the user wanted to use / for options and \ for path separation or vice versa.