I would like to code a function to which you can pass a file path, for example:
C:\FOLDER\SUBFOLDER\FILE.TXT
and it would open Windows Explorer with the folder containing the file and then select this file inside the folder. (Similar to the "Show In Folder" concept used in many programs.)
How can I do this?
Easiest way without using Win32 shell functions is to simply launch explorer.exe with the /select
parameter. For example, launching the process
explorer.exe /select,"C:\Folder\subfolder\file.txt"
will open a new explorer window to C:\Folder\subfolder with file.txt selected.
If you wish to do it programmatically without launching a new process, you'll need to use the shell function SHOpenFolderAndSelectItems
, which is what the /select
command to explorer.exe will use internally. Note that this requires the use of PIDLs, and can be a real PITA if you are not familiar with how the shell APIs work.
Here's a complete, programmatic implementation of the /select
approach, with path cleanup thanks to suggestions from @Bhushan and @tehDorf:
public bool ExploreFile(string filePath) {
if (!System.IO.File.Exists(filePath)) {
return false;
}
//Clean up file path so it can be navigated OK
filePath = System.IO.Path.GetFullPath(filePath);
System.Diagnostics.Process.Start("explorer.exe", string.Format("/select,\"{0}\"", filePath));
return true;
}
Reference: Explorer.exe Command-line switches