My problem is that I have a windows forms application which is located on a shared location, which is doing some logic and at the end i need to export the data into an excel file.
But the excel file should be exported to the machine that the users is logged in, not on the shared server where the application is hosted ...
Any Ideas?
Example of the situation:
The location of the application is at 192.168.1.150\AppName\App.exe
I have access to this shared location and I'm starting the exe file from there.
I need the application to export an excel file to my computer on my desktop .... how?
If you think the folder "My Documents" is a good place to save the Excel file, then this code will help to get you the path:
var folderPath = Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.MyDocuments)
or if you want to put the file on the Desktop:
var folderPath = Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.DesktopDirectory)
The code works regardless of where the folder "My Documents" (or "Desktop") is located for the user (C:, D:, Network share, etc), or which language version his windows installation is using.
To combine with a time based file name:
var fileName = $"your_file_{DateTime.Now:yyMMddHHmmss}.xlsx";
var fullPath = Path.Combine(folderPath, fileName);
I often use time based file names to not overwrite if there is a previous file. (It would of course overwrite if created the same second)
If you want a file name that is guaranteed to be unique you can use a Guid instead of DateTime:
var fileName = $"your_file_{Guid.NewGuid():N}.xlsx";
If the file is just used "within the program" you can also store it in the temporary files folder. To get the path to the temporary files folder you write var folderPath = Path.GetTempPath()
Hope this helps!
Why don't you just use Save File Dialog and save the excel file where you want? Something like this:
private void SaveFile_FileOk(object sender, CancelEventArgs e)
{
string name = SaveFile.FileName;
string[] savearray = new string[] { "some test:" }
File.WriteAllLines(name, savearray);
//this is just an example, your excel file goes here.
}
And on your button to save:
SaveFile.ShowDialog();
You can choose the path for where you want to save...
Related
get current date and make directory and second when directory is created, in that directory I have to store excel file and also save file as current date.
String Todaysdate = DateTime.Now.ToString("dd-MM-yyyy");
if (!Directory.Exists("C:\\Users\\Krupal\\Desktop\\" + Todaysdate))
{
Directory.CreateDirectory("C:\\Users\\Krupal\\Desktop\\" + Todaysdate);
}
This code have made directory with current date.
But when I want to store file in that directory, it generates the error:
Could not find a part of the path
'D:\WORK\RNSB\RNSB\bin\Debug\22-01-2020\22-01-2020.XLS
Belove path is store excel file that i have to store.
using (System.IO.StreamWriter file = new System.IO.StreamWriter(Todaysdate+"\\"+DateTime.Now.ToString("dd/MM/yyyy") +".XLS"))
Actually you are making the directory in a path then you are saving the .xls in another path.
You are making the directory using this path:
"C:\\Users\\Krupal\\Desktop\\" + Todaysdate
Then, here the path where you are trying to save the .xls:
Todaysdate+"\\"+DateTime.Now.ToString("dd/MM/yyyy") +".XLS"
The error shows the problem clearly, it could not fin this path:
D:\WORK\RNSB\RNSB\bin\Debug\22-01-2020\22-01-2020.XLS
While creating the .xls you are omitting the root path, so the process looks for the path 22-01-2020\22-01-2020.XLS in his working directory D:\WORK\RNSB\RNSB\bin\Debug.
You just need to align those paths: I sugget you to use relative paths, so here how you should fix your code:
String Todaysdate = DateTime.Now.ToString("dd-MM-yyyy");
if (!Directory.Exists(Todaysdate))
{
Directory.CreateDirectory(Todaysdate);
}
//then
using (System.IO.StreamWriter file = new System.IO.StreamWriter(Todaysdate+"\\"+DateTime.Now.ToString("dd/MM/yyyy") +".XLS"))
I presume you are running your WinForms application in Debug mode. This means that your current path is [your application path]\bin\Debug. If you look in file explorer, you will find that an executable has been created there. When using StreamWriter without an absolute file name, the file it tries to create is relative to the current execution path (in your case 'D:\WORK\RNSB\RNSB\bin\Debug'). StreamWriter will create a new file, if one does not exist, but it will not create a new folder, and you are passing it Todaysdate + "\\" which is effectively a new folder. Hence you are getting the error message.
To fix your problem, you need to provide the absolute path to your newly created directory thus:
using (System.IO.StreamWriter file = new System.IO.StreamWriter("C:\\Users\\Krupal\\Desktop\\" + Todaysdate+"\\"+DateTime.Now.ToString("dd/MM/yyyy") +".XLS"))
Winforms always expect directories inside Debug Folder, since it's EXE file is inside Debug and try to find it inside Debug folder.
In error it clearly shows that it is looking inside "Debug" folder.
Can you check whether File Exists in the mentioned folder created by you in C Drive.
// To Write File
System.IO.File.WriteAllLines(#"C:\Users\Public\TestFolder\WriteLines.txt", lines);
You can follow this MSDN Post, hope it helps, if Yes, please Upvote it
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/programming-guide/file-system/how-to-write-to-a-text-file
I have a quiz that has a login feature but, when you change pc you must also change the drive the file is located e.g D drive, E drive etc...
Currently its set to F. Is there something i can add that will make it automatically search each drive for the file?
Here is my code
if (File.Exists(#"F:\C# Completed quiz\adam new\Mario quiz\bin/PlayerDetails.txt"))
{
string[] lines = File.ReadAllLines(#"F:\C# Completed quiz\adam new\Mario quiz\bin/PlayerDetails.txt");
I'd recommend you just put it in the AppData or MyDocuments folder:
string filename = System.IO.Path.Combine(Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.ApplicationData), "C# Completed quiz","adam new","Mario quiz","bin","PlayerDetails.txt");
//or Environment.SpecialFolder.MyDocuments
if (File.Exists(filename))
{
string[] lines = File.ReadAllLines(filename);
}
you need to enumerate the hard drives on the system and inspect them one at a time
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.io.directory.getlogicaldrives(v=vs.110).aspx
shows how to enumerate the hard drives on the system
This answer uses what looks like a better way
How can I determine if a given drive letter is a local/mapped/usb drive?
Once you know a drive is a mounted drive the you should look at <drive>:/<your path>
Use Resource file to store your txt inside the application or just distribute it with your executable. To add resource file:
Right click on your project and select Properties
Go to Resources tab and create new file
Click Add resource -> Add Existing File...
Choose your text file and click Open
The file can now be accessed like string:
var lines = Properties.Resources.PlayerDetails;
If the file is in the same folder as your exe then you can access it in this way:
var lines = File.ReadAllLines("PlayerDetails.txt");
Edit: Note the comment below if you prefer to use this method.
This is really annoying problem and it's going to drive me mad. I like to read information such like files, directories ect. but my app cannot find anything OUTSIDE its folder it runs in.
I'm using Visual Studio 2015 and developing Windows Universal apps.
This routine under works very well if I change the directory inside the folder my app run like "Assets" and any other folder. But outside of my app folder result is zero, not even any errors :-(
Ok, Here is the simple code, What I Do Wrong?
private void GetThem_Click(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
string myDir = #"c:\mydir\";
string[] files;
files = Directory.GetFiles(myDir,"*.jpg");
foreach (string stuff in files)
{
RESULT.Text = RESULT.Text + stuff + " , ";
}
}
A quick search would have given you the answer : It is not possible to access the file system like a classic desktop app. The answer of #Rico Suter explain you what you can acces and how :
Directories which are declared in the manifest file (e.g. Documents, Pictures, Videos folder)
Directories and files which the user manually selected with the FileOpenPicker or FolderPicker
Files from the FutureAccessList or MostRecentlyUsedList
Files which are opened with a file extension association or via sharing
Once a file is picked by the user, you can add it to MostRecentlyUsedList or FutureAccessList to use it again later using this snippet (C#) from MSDN :
StorageFile file = await savePicker.PickSaveFileAsync();
if (file != null)
{
// Add to MRU with metadata (For example, a string that represents the date)
string mruToken = Windows.Storage.AccessCache.StorageApplicationPermissions.MostRecentlyUsedList.Add(file, "20120716");
// Add to FA without metadata
string faToken = Windows.Storage.AccessCache.StorageApplicationPermissions.FutureAccessList.Add(file);
}
Then store the retrieved token because you will need it to access the file using GetFileAsync(token)
I have been using a LocalDB.mdf file to build my application, but now need to use it in production and create an installable application.
After research, it seems the best place to store such a file is in the /Appdata/Local/ folder.
I intend to create a new LocalDB.mdf file in there if it doesnt already exist, or has been deleted.
I have a pre-made LocalDB.mdf file in my App Resources, which I wanted to copy into this /Appdata/Local/ folder on first run, but I am seeing an Access is denied error.
I can create a blank file ok to that folder.
Here is the code:
string appDataFolder = Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.LocalApplicationData);
string dvAppDataFolder = appDataFolder + #"\MyApp";
AppDomain.CurrentDomain.SetData("DataDirectory", dvAppDataFolder);
if (!Directory.Exists(dvAppDataFolder))
Directory.CreateDirectory(dvAppDataFolder);
if (!File.Exists(dvAppDataFolder + "LocalDB.mdf"))
{
File.WriteAllBytes(dvAppDataFolder, LokiServer.Properties.Resources.newDB);
}
In addition, Am I going about this the right way?
This line
if (!File.Exists(dvAppDataFolder + "LocalDB.mdf"))
is probably wrong. Missing the backslash, better to use Path.Combine instead of a string concatenation.
Finally, you want to write to a file not to a folder
string fileName = Path.Combine(dvAppDataFolder,"LocalDB.mdf");
if (!File.Exists(fileName))
{
File.WriteAllBytes(fileName, LokiServer.Properties.Resources.newDB);
}
Are you doing it right? It depends. If your app data should be kept separated for each user of your target machine then you are right, but if you want your database to be available to all users of that machine then use
string appDataFolder = Environment.GetFolderPath
(Environment.SpecialFolder.CommonApplicationData);
I'm using C# windows application .
I want to save files in my local system.
I used Open File dialog to attach the files.
Here the text inside the file is copying,I want the file itself to get copied with a new name.But what I am really looking for is , it should just save the file automatically and not show the SaveDialog Box?
How it can be done in windows application.Can anybody help me please?
The code is shown below:
private string GetFileName()
{
OpenFileDialog op1 = new OpenFileDialog();
DialogResult result = op1.ShowDialog();
if (result == DialogResult.OK) // Test result.
{
txtEn.Text = op1.FileName;
FileName = op1.FileName;
//MessageBox.Show(FileName);
File.Copy(op1.FileName, #"D:\Backup\");
}
return FileName;
}
SQL Server 2012 seems unrelated to your question. Provided that you have proper access rights to the target directory, then in order to automate the procedure (as per your question) you don't need to use the OpenFileDialog; just a single line should suffice the goal:
//Overwriting a file of the same name is not allowed
File.Copy(FileName, #"D:\Backup\" + FileName)
or
//Overwriting a file of the same name is allowed
File.Copy(FileName, #"D:\Backup\" + FileName, true)
You can also apply some additional logic pertinent to backup file naming (upon necessity).
Hope this may help. Best regards,
Are you trying to copy a file from some x location on your file system to y location (in your case D:\Backup folder) in the file system? If that is the requirement here, I see that you are using the FileName property of OpenFileDialog which gets the File path. This you are appending to D:\Backup. You should instead use the Path.GetFileName property to first extract the file name with extension and then append it to the new folder path
File.Copy(fileName, #"D:\Backup\" + Path.GetFileName(fileName));