Reputation: 47900
How do I set a path for DLL files to be searched in Visual Studio for a particular project alone?
Now I am setting it in the environment path
variable, but I would like better control over this.
Upvotes: 94
Views: 329825
Reputation: 344
None of the answers solved exactly my problem (the solution file I was running was trying to find xcopy to copy a dll after generation).
What solved it for me was going into menu "Project -> Properties"
Then in the window that opens choosing on the left pane: "Configuration Properties -> VC++ Directories
On the right pane under "General" choosing "Executable Directories "
And then adding:
$(SystemRoot)\system32;$(SystemRoot);$(SystemRoot)\System32\Wbem;$(SystemRoot)\System32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\;$(ExecutablePath)
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1199
Search MSDN for "How to: Set Environment Variables for Projects". (It's Project>Properties>Configuration Properties>Debugging "Environment" and "Merge Environment" properties for those who are in a rush.)
The syntax is NAME=VALUE and macros can be used (for example, $(OutDir)).
For example, to prepend C:\Windows\Temp to the PATH:
PATH=C:\WINDOWS\Temp;%PATH%
Similarly, to append $(TargetDir)\DLLS to the PATH:
PATH=%PATH%;$(TargetDir)\DLLS
Upvotes: 119
Reputation: 11925
If you only need to add one path per configuration (debug/release), you could set the debug command working directory:
Project | Properties | Select Configuration | Configuration Properties | Debugging | Working directory
Repeat for each project configuration.
Upvotes: 11
Reputation: 24341
You have a couple of options:
Upvotes: 55
Reputation: 111846
Set the PATH variable, like you're doing. If you're running the program from the IDE, you can modify environment variables by adjusting the Debugging options in the project properties.
If the DLLs are named such that you don't need different paths for the different configuration types, you can add the path to the system PATH variable or to Visual Studio's global one in Tools | Options.
Upvotes: 2