Reputation: 48686
I have an application which has an option to show the selected file in the folder in which the file resides. My question is, how do I achieve this?
To clarify, if a user in my program selected the "Test.txt" file, then I want a Windows Explorer window to pop up and highlight the file the user selected. You can see similar behavior in LimeWire and uTorrent. If you select a file in either of those programs and choose "Show in Folder", it pops up a Windows Explorer window with the file highlighted and selected. I am trying to duplicate this behavior.
I tried using the following line:
System.Diagnostics.Process.Start("Explorer");
This will popup the Windows Explorer window, however, it always seems to open up by default in "My Documents" folder.
Upvotes: 15
Views: 13407
Reputation: 1
Strictly to launch Windows Explorer within a specific path, you initial solution works well with C# (VS2010, VS2019), just need one more argument: so, instead of
System.Diagnostics.Process.Start("Explorer");
that is going to 'MyDocuments' folder, use
System.Diagnostics.Process.Start("Explorer", filePath);
or even
System.Diagnostics.Process.Start("Explorer", @"C:\Program Files");
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 101626
There is a documented API to do this: SHOpenFolderAndSelectItems. Who knows, it might even do the right thing when explorer is not the default shell :)
VB example as requested:
Imports System
Partial Public Class NativeMethods
<System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImportAttribute("shell32.dll", EntryPoint:="ILCreateFromPathW")> _
Public Shared Function ILCreateFromPathW(<System.Runtime.InteropServices.InAttribute(), System.Runtime.InteropServices.MarshalAsAttribute(System.Runtime.InteropServices.UnmanagedType.LPWStr)> ByVal Path As String) As System.IntPtr
End Function
<System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImportAttribute("shell32.dll", EntryPoint:="ILFree")> _
Public Shared Sub ILFree(<System.Runtime.InteropServices.InAttribute()> ByVal pidl As System.IntPtr)
End Sub
<System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImportAttribute("shell32.dll", EntryPoint:="ILClone")> _
Public Shared Function ILClone(<System.Runtime.InteropServices.InAttribute()> ByVal pidl As System.IntPtr) As System.IntPtr
End Function
<System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImportAttribute("shell32.dll", EntryPoint:="ILFindLastID")> _
Public Shared Function ILFindLastID(<System.Runtime.InteropServices.InAttribute()> ByVal pidl As System.IntPtr) As System.IntPtr
End Function
<System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImportAttribute("shell32.dll", EntryPoint:="ILRemoveLastID")> _
Public Shared Function ILRemoveLastID(<System.Runtime.InteropServices.InAttribute()> ByVal pidl As System.IntPtr) As System.Int32
End Function
<System.Runtime.InteropServices.DllImportAttribute("shell32.dll", EntryPoint:="SHOpenFolderAndSelectItems")> _
Public Shared Function SHOpenFolderAndSelectItems(<System.Runtime.InteropServices.InAttribute()> ByVal pidl As System.IntPtr, ByVal cidl As System.Int32, <System.Runtime.InteropServices.InAttribute()> ByRef child As System.IntPtr, ByVal Flags As System.Int32) As System.Int32
End Function
End Class
Module Program
Sub Main()
Dim pidl, clone, child As System.IntPtr
pidl = NativeMethods.ILCreateFromPathW("c:\windows\explorer.exe")
If pidl <> System.IntPtr.Zero Then
clone = NativeMethods.ILClone(pidl)
child = NativeMethods.ILFindLastID(clone)
NativeMethods.ILRemoveLastID(pidl)
NativeMethods.SHOpenFolderAndSelectItems(pidl, 1, child, 0)
NativeMethods.ILFree(clone)
NativeMethods.ILFree(pidl)
End If
End Sub
End Module
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 23
For VB:
Dim q as Char = ControlChars.Quote
Dim path As String = q & "D:\examples\test doc.txt" & q
Dim psi as New ProcessStartInfo("Explorer.exe", "/Select, " & path)
Process.Start(psi)
As others have pointed out, paths containing spaces must be enclosed in quotes.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1071
Here you go,
string fileToSelect = @"C:\temp.img";
string args = string.Format("/Select, \"{0}\"", fileToSelect);
ProcessStartInfo pfi = new ProcessStartInfo("Explorer.exe", args);
System.Diagnostics.Process.Start(pfi);
Note: Adding \"
before and after the {0}
parameter enables the fileToSelect
string to contain spaces (i.e. "C:\My Documents").
From this Thread:
Programmatically select multiple files in windows explorer
Cheers,
Upvotes: 29
Reputation: 3539
You could construct the folder path in a string, then send it to the windows command line to browse.
Upvotes: 0