anon271334
anon271334

Reputation:

How do I exit a WPF application programmatically?

How is one supposed to exit an application such as when the user clicks on the Exit menu item from the File menu?

I have tried:

this.Dispose();
this.Exit();
Application.ShutDown();
Application.Exit();
Application.Dispose();

Among many others. Nothing works.

Upvotes: 573

Views: 478918

Answers (18)

burgund
burgund

Reputation: 402

Summarizing, there are a few ways to do that.

1) Killing the process, which skip the finalization, error handling etc.:

Process.GetCurrentProcess().Kill();

2) Shutting down current application, which is probably the proper way because it calls the exit events:

Application.Current.Shutdown();

or

this.Shutdown();

(when clled in an instance of App-class)

3) Closing current app (all forms have to be closed/finished earlier):

this.Close(); 

(when called in an instance of App-class)

4) Exiting the environment, which terminates the app:

Environment.Exit(0);

Also, You may want to read about exit statusses here

Upvotes: 23

jungyeontak
jungyeontak

Reputation: 9

if (System.Windows.Forms.Application.MessageLoop) 
{
    // WinForms app
    System.Windows.Forms.Application.Exit();
    system.Environment.Exit(1);
}

Upvotes: 0

datchung
datchung

Reputation: 4652

If you are using Application.Current.Shutdown() to exit the application, you may get a System.InvalidOperationException: 'The calling thread cannot access this object because a different thread owns it. if you are invoking it from a different thread. To solve this, you can wrap the call like this

Application.Current.Dispatcher.Invoke(() => Application.Current.Shutdown());

Upvotes: 1

Soumya Mahunt
Soumya Mahunt

Reputation: 2802

If you want to exit from another thread that didn't create the application object, use: System.Windows.Application.Current.Dispatcher.InvokeShutdown()

Upvotes: 2

Ali Yousefi
Ali Yousefi

Reputation: 2765

Another way you can do this:

System.Diagnostics.Process.GetCurrentProcess().Kill();

This will force kill your application. It always works, even in a multi-threaded application.

Note: Just be careful not to lose unsaved data in another thread.

Upvotes: 12

Alpha-LIon
Alpha-LIon

Reputation: 1

Application.Current.ShutdownMode = ShutdownMode.OnExplicitShutdown;

Upvotes: -2

Markus Sommerschnee
Markus Sommerschnee

Reputation: 25

From xaml code you can call a predefined SystemCommand:

Command="SystemCommands.MinimizeWindowCommand"

I think this should be the prefered way...

Upvotes: -3

John
John

Reputation: 6553

If you really need it to close out you can also use Environment.Exit(), but it is not graceful at all (more like ending the process).

Use it as follows:

Environment.Exit(0)

Upvotes: 196

Allen Pestaluky
Allen Pestaluky

Reputation: 3724

As wuminqi said, Application.Current.Shutdown(); is irreversible, and I believe it is typically used to force an application to close at times such as when a user is logging off or shutting down Windows.

Instead, call this.close() in your main window. This is the same as pressing Alt + F4 or the close [x] button on the window. This will cause all other owned windows to close and will end up calling Application.Current.Shutdown(); so long as the close action wasn't cancelled. Please see the MSDN documentation on Closing a Window.

Also, because this.close() is cancellable you can put in a save changes confirmation dialog in the closing event handler. Simply make an event handler for <Window Closing="..."> and change e.Cancel accordingly. (See the MSDN documentation for more details on how to do this.)

Upvotes: 83

wuminqi
wuminqi

Reputation: 349

According to my understanding, Application.Current.Shutdown() also has its drawback.

If you want to show a confirmation window to let users confirm on quit or not, Application.Current.Shutdown() is irreversible.

Upvotes: 7

TimothyP
TimothyP

Reputation: 21765

There should not be an Application.ShutDown(); or .Exit() message.

Application is a static class. It does not refer to the current application. You need to get to the current application and then shut it down like this:

Application.Current.Shutdown();

Upvotes: 17

Dirk Vollmar
Dirk Vollmar

Reputation: 176259

To exit your application you can call

System.Windows.Application.Current.Shutdown();

As described in the documentation to the Application.Shutdown method you can also modify the shutdown behavior of your application by specifying a ShutdownMode:

Shutdown is implicitly called by Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) in the following situations:

  • When ShutdownMode is set to OnLastWindowClose.
  • When the ShutdownMode is set to OnMainWindowClose.
  • When a user ends a session and the SessionEnding event is either unhandled, or handled without cancellation.

Please also note that Application.Current.Shutdown(); may only be called from the thread that created the Application object, i.e. normally the main thread.

Upvotes: 911

Kylo Ren
Kylo Ren

Reputation: 8823

Use any of the following as needed:

1.

 App.Current.Shutdown();
OR
 Application.Current.Shutdown();

2.

 App.Current.MainWindow.Close();
OR
 Application.Current.MainWindow.Close();

Above all methods will call closing event of Window class and execution may stop at some point (cause usually applications put dialogues like 'are you sure?' or 'Would you like to save data before closing?', before a window is closed completely)

3. But if you want to terminate the application without any warning immediately. Use below

   Environment.Exit(0);

Upvotes: 40

Anders
Anders

Reputation: 17564

Caliburn micro flavoured

public class CloseAppResult : CancelResult
{
    public override void Execute(CoroutineExecutionContext context)
    {
        Application.Current.Shutdown();
        base.Execute(context);
    }
}

public class CancelResult : Result
{
    public override void Execute(CoroutineExecutionContext context)
    {
        OnCompleted(this, new ResultCompletionEventArgs { WasCancelled = true });
    }
}

Upvotes: 3

Iwona Kubowicz
Iwona Kubowicz

Reputation: 374

Try

App.Current.Shutdown();

For me

Application.Current.Shutdown(); 

didn't work.

Upvotes: 7

Ravi
Ravi

Reputation: 79

private void _MenuExit_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
   System.Windows.Application.Current.MainWindow.Close();
}

//Override the onClose method in the Application Main window

protected override void OnClosing(System.ComponentModel.CancelEventArgs e)
{
    MessageBoxResult result =   MessageBox.Show("Do you really want to close", "",
                                          MessageBoxButton.OKCancel);
    if (result == MessageBoxResult.Cancel)
    {
       e.Cancel = true;
    }
    base.OnClosing(e);
}

Upvotes: 7

B.K.
B.K.

Reputation: 10172

Here's how I do mine:

// Any control that causes the Window.Closing even to trigger.
private void MenuItemExit_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
    this.Close();
}

// Method to handle the Window.Closing event.
private void Window_Closing(object sender, CancelEventArgs e)
{
    var response = MessageBox.Show("Do you really want to exit?", "Exiting...",
                                   MessageBoxButton.YesNo, MessageBoxImage.Exclamation);
    if (response == MessageBoxResult.No)
    {
        e.Cancel = true;
    }
    else
    {
        Application.Current.Shutdown();
    }
}

I only call for Application.Current.ShutDown() from the main application window, all other windows use this.Close(). In my main window, Window_Closing(...) handles the top right x button. If any of the methods call for window closer, Window_Closing(...) grabs the event for shut down if user confirms.

The reason I do in fact use Application.Current.Shutdown() in my main window is that I've noticed that if a design mistake was made and I haven't declared a parent of one of my windows in an application, if that window is opened without being shown prior to the last active window closing, I'm left with a hidden window running in the background. The application will not shut down. The only way to prevent complete memory leak is for me to go into the Task Manager to shut down the application. Application.Current.Shutdown() protects me from unintended design flaws.

That is from my personal experience. In the end, use what is best for your scenario. This is just another piece of information.

Upvotes: 20

Brian MacKay
Brian MacKay

Reputation: 32037

This should do the trick:

Application.Current.Shutdown();

If you're interested, here's some additional material that I found helpful:

Details on Application.Current

WPF Application LifeCycle

Upvotes: 29

Related Questions