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How to navigate a few folders up?

People also ask

How do I create a directory path?

To write a path that moves into a folder we specify the folder name, followed by a forward slash, then the file name.

How do I go back a file path?

Starting with “/” returns to the root directory and starts there. Starting with “../” moves one directory backwards and starts there. Starting with “../../” moves two directories backwards and starts there (and so on…) To move forward, just start with the first subdirectory and keep moving forward.

What is an example of a file path?

For example, if the file path is D:sources , the current directory is C:\Documents\ , and the last current directory on drive D: was D:\sources\ , the result is D:\sources\sources . These "drive relative" paths are a common source of program and script logic errors.


Other simple way is to do this:

string path = @"C:\Folder1\Folder2\Folder3\Folder4";
string newPath = Path.GetFullPath(Path.Combine(path, @"..\..\"));

Note This goes two levels up. The result would be: newPath = @"C:\Folder1\Folder2\";


if c:\folder1\folder2\folder3\bin is the path then the following code will return the path base folder of bin folder

//string directory=System.IO.Directory.GetParent(Environment.CurrentDirectory).ToString());

string directory=System.IO.Directory.GetParent(Environment.CurrentDirectory).ToString();

ie,c:\folder1\folder2\folder3

if you want folder2 path then you can get the directory by

string directory = System.IO.Directory.GetParent(System.IO.Directory.GetParent(Environment.CurrentDirectory).ToString()).ToString();

then you will get path as c:\folder1\folder2\


You can use ..\path to go one level up, ..\..\path to go two levels up from path.

You can use Path class too.

C# Path class


This is what worked best for me:

string parentOfStartupPath = Path.GetFullPath(Path.Combine(Application.StartupPath, @"../"));

Getting the 'right' path wasn't the problem, adding '../' obviously does that, but after that, the given string isn't usable, because it will just add the '../' at the end. Surrounding it with Path.GetFullPath() will give you the absolute path, making it usable.


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