WPF defines its own Main()
method. How should I go about replacing it with my own Main
method that (normally) opens the WPF MainWindow
(e.g. to add a non-WPF scripting mode via command-line arguments)?
Some examples depict changing App.xaml's Build Action from ApplicationDefinition
to Page
and writing your own Main()
that instantiates the App
class and calls its Run()
method, but this can produce some unwanted consequences in the resolution of application-wide resources in App.xaml.
Instead, I suggest making your own Main()
in its own class and setting the Startup Object to that class in the project properties:
public class EntryPoint {
[STAThread]
public static void Main(string[] args) {
if (args != null && args.Length > 0) {
// ...
} else {
var app = new App();
app.InitializeComponent();
app.Run();
}
}
}
I do this to take advantage of some AppDomain
events that must be subscribed to before anything else happens (such as AssemblyResolve
). The unwanted consequences of setting App.xaml to Page
that I experienced included my UserControl
Views (M-V-VM) not resolving resources held in App.xaml during design-time.