To navigate to your home directory, use "cd" or "cd ~" To navigate up one directory level, use "cd .." To navigate to the previous directory (or back), use "cd -"
Call opendir() function to open all file in present directory. Initialize dr pointer as dr = opendir("."). If(dr) while ((en = readdir(dr)) != NULL) print all the file name using en->d_name.
The DIR data type represents a directory stream. You shouldn't ever allocate objects of the struct dirent or DIR data types, since the directory access functions do that for you. Instead, you refer to these objects using the pointers returned by the following functions. Directory streams are a high-level interface.
string folderPath = "";
FolderBrowserDialog folderBrowserDialog1 = new FolderBrowserDialog();
if (folderBrowserDialog1.ShowDialog() == DialogResult.OK) {
folderPath = folderBrowserDialog1.SelectedPath ;
}
The FolderBrowserDialog class is the best option.
Note: there is no guarantee this code will work in future versions of the .Net framework. Using private .Net framework internals as done here through reflection is probably not good overall. Use the interop solution mentioned at the bottom, as the Windows API is less likely to change.
If you are looking for a Folder picker that looks more like the Windows 7 dialog, with the ability to copy and paste from a textbox at the bottom and the navigation pane on the left with favorites and common locations, then you can get access to that in a very lightweight way.
The FolderBrowserDialog UI is very minimal:
But you can have this instead:
Here's a class that opens a Vista-style folder picker using the .Net private IFileDialog
interface, without directly using interop in the code (.Net takes care of that for you). It falls back to the pre-Vista dialog if not in a high enough Windows version. Should work in Windows 7, 8, 9, 10 and higher (theoretically).
using System;
using System.Reflection;
using System.Windows.Forms;
namespace MyCoolCompany.Shuriken {
/// <summary>
/// Present the Windows Vista-style open file dialog to select a folder. Fall back for older Windows Versions
/// </summary>
public class FolderSelectDialog {
private string _initialDirectory;
private string _title;
private string _fileName = "";
public string InitialDirectory {
get { return string.IsNullOrEmpty(_initialDirectory) ? Environment.CurrentDirectory : _initialDirectory; }
set { _initialDirectory = value; }
}
public string Title {
get { return _title ?? "Select a folder"; }
set { _title = value; }
}
public string FileName { get { return _fileName; } }
public bool Show() { return Show(IntPtr.Zero); }
/// <param name="hWndOwner">Handle of the control or window to be the parent of the file dialog</param>
/// <returns>true if the user clicks OK</returns>
public bool Show(IntPtr hWndOwner) {
var result = Environment.OSVersion.Version.Major >= 6
? VistaDialog.Show(hWndOwner, InitialDirectory, Title)
: ShowXpDialog(hWndOwner, InitialDirectory, Title);
_fileName = result.FileName;
return result.Result;
}
private struct ShowDialogResult {
public bool Result { get; set; }
public string FileName { get; set; }
}
private static ShowDialogResult ShowXpDialog(IntPtr ownerHandle, string initialDirectory, string title) {
var folderBrowserDialog = new FolderBrowserDialog {
Description = title,
SelectedPath = initialDirectory,
ShowNewFolderButton = false
};
var dialogResult = new ShowDialogResult();
if (folderBrowserDialog.ShowDialog(new WindowWrapper(ownerHandle)) == DialogResult.OK) {
dialogResult.Result = true;
dialogResult.FileName = folderBrowserDialog.SelectedPath;
}
return dialogResult;
}
private static class VistaDialog {
private const string c_foldersFilter = "Folders|\n";
private const BindingFlags c_flags = BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.Public | BindingFlags.NonPublic;
private readonly static Assembly s_windowsFormsAssembly = typeof(FileDialog).Assembly;
private readonly static Type s_iFileDialogType = s_windowsFormsAssembly.GetType("System.Windows.Forms.FileDialogNative+IFileDialog");
private readonly static MethodInfo s_createVistaDialogMethodInfo = typeof(OpenFileDialog).GetMethod("CreateVistaDialog", c_flags);
private readonly static MethodInfo s_onBeforeVistaDialogMethodInfo = typeof(OpenFileDialog).GetMethod("OnBeforeVistaDialog", c_flags);
private readonly static MethodInfo s_getOptionsMethodInfo = typeof(FileDialog).GetMethod("GetOptions", c_flags);
private readonly static MethodInfo s_setOptionsMethodInfo = s_iFileDialogType.GetMethod("SetOptions", c_flags);
private readonly static uint s_fosPickFoldersBitFlag = (uint) s_windowsFormsAssembly
.GetType("System.Windows.Forms.FileDialogNative+FOS")
.GetField("FOS_PICKFOLDERS")
.GetValue(null);
private readonly static ConstructorInfo s_vistaDialogEventsConstructorInfo = s_windowsFormsAssembly
.GetType("System.Windows.Forms.FileDialog+VistaDialogEvents")
.GetConstructor(c_flags, null, new[] { typeof(FileDialog) }, null);
private readonly static MethodInfo s_adviseMethodInfo = s_iFileDialogType.GetMethod("Advise");
private readonly static MethodInfo s_unAdviseMethodInfo = s_iFileDialogType.GetMethod("Unadvise");
private readonly static MethodInfo s_showMethodInfo = s_iFileDialogType.GetMethod("Show");
public static ShowDialogResult Show(IntPtr ownerHandle, string initialDirectory, string title) {
var openFileDialog = new OpenFileDialog {
AddExtension = false,
CheckFileExists = false,
DereferenceLinks = true,
Filter = c_foldersFilter,
InitialDirectory = initialDirectory,
Multiselect = false,
Title = title
};
var iFileDialog = s_createVistaDialogMethodInfo.Invoke(openFileDialog, new object[] { });
s_onBeforeVistaDialogMethodInfo.Invoke(openFileDialog, new[] { iFileDialog });
s_setOptionsMethodInfo.Invoke(iFileDialog, new object[] { (uint) s_getOptionsMethodInfo.Invoke(openFileDialog, new object[] { }) | s_fosPickFoldersBitFlag });
var adviseParametersWithOutputConnectionToken = new[] { s_vistaDialogEventsConstructorInfo.Invoke(new object[] { openFileDialog }), 0U };
s_adviseMethodInfo.Invoke(iFileDialog, adviseParametersWithOutputConnectionToken);
try {
int retVal = (int) s_showMethodInfo.Invoke(iFileDialog, new object[] { ownerHandle });
return new ShowDialogResult {
Result = retVal == 0,
FileName = openFileDialog.FileName
};
}
finally {
s_unAdviseMethodInfo.Invoke(iFileDialog, new[] { adviseParametersWithOutputConnectionToken[1] });
}
}
}
// Wrap an IWin32Window around an IntPtr
private class WindowWrapper : IWin32Window {
private readonly IntPtr _handle;
public WindowWrapper(IntPtr handle) { _handle = handle; }
public IntPtr Handle { get { return _handle; } }
}
}
}
I developed this as a cleaned up version of .NET Win 7-style folder select dialog by Bill Seddon of lyquidity.com (I have no affiliation). I wrote my own because his solution requires an additional Reflection class that isn't needed for this focused purpose, uses exception-based flow control, doesn't cache the results of its reflection calls. Note that the nested static VistaDialog
class is so that its static reflection variables don't try to get populated if the Show
method is never called.
It is used like so in a Windows Form:
var dialog = new FolderSelectDialog {
InitialDirectory = musicFolderTextBox.Text,
Title = "Select a folder to import music from"
};
if (dialog.Show(Handle)) {
musicFolderTextBox.Text = dialog.FileName;
}
You can of course play around with its options and what properties it exposes. For example, it allows multiselect in the Vista-style dialog.
Also, please note that Simon Mourier gave an answer that shows how to do the exact same job using interop against the Windows API directly, though his version would have to be supplemented to use the older style dialog if in an older version of Windows. Unfortunately, I hadn't found his post yet when I worked up my solution. Name your poison!
You could just use the FolderBrowserDialog
class from the System.Windows.Forms
namespace.
Please don't try and roll your own with a TreeView/DirectoryInfo class. For one thing there are many nice features you get for free (icons/right-click/networks) by using SHBrowseForFolder. For another there are a edge cases/catches you will likely not be aware of.
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