RegistryKey.GetValueKind(String) Method
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Retrieves the registry data type of the value associated with the specified name.
public:
Microsoft::Win32::RegistryValueKind GetValueKind(System::String ^ name);
public Microsoft.Win32.RegistryValueKind GetValueKind (string? name);
public Microsoft.Win32.RegistryValueKind GetValueKind (string name);
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.ComVisible(false)]
public Microsoft.Win32.RegistryValueKind GetValueKind (string name);
member this.GetValueKind : string -> Microsoft.Win32.RegistryValueKind
[<System.Runtime.InteropServices.ComVisible(false)>]
member this.GetValueKind : string -> Microsoft.Win32.RegistryValueKind
Public Function GetValueKind (name As String) As RegistryValueKind
Parameters
- name
- String
The name of the value whose registry data type is to be retrieved. This string is not case-sensitive.
Returns
The registry data type of the value associated with name
.
- Attributes
Exceptions
The user does not have the permissions required to read from the registry key.
The RegistryKey that contains the specified value is closed (closed keys cannot be accessed).
The subkey that contains the specified value does not exist.
-or-
The name/value pair specified by name
does not exist.
The user does not have the necessary registry rights.
Examples
The following code example creates a test key and adds values of different data types to the key. The example then reads the name/value pairs and displays them to the console, using the GetValueKind method to retrieve the corresponding registry data types.
using namespace System;
using namespace Microsoft::Win32;
int main()
{
// Delete and recreate the test key.
Registry::CurrentUser->DeleteSubKey( "RegistryValueKindExample", false );
RegistryKey ^ rk = Registry::CurrentUser->CreateSubKey( "RegistryValueKindExample" );
// Create name/value pairs.
// This overload supports QWord (long) values.
rk->SetValue( "QuadWordValue", 42, RegistryValueKind::QWord );
// The following SetValue calls have the same effect as using the
// SetValue overload that does not specify RegistryValueKind.
//
rk->SetValue( "DWordValue", 42, RegistryValueKind::DWord );
rk->SetValue( "MultipleStringValue", gcnew array<String^>{
"One","Two","Three"
}, RegistryValueKind::MultiString );
rk->SetValue( "BinaryValue", gcnew array<Byte>{
10,43,44,45,14,255
}, RegistryValueKind::Binary );
rk->SetValue( "StringValue", "The path is %PATH%", RegistryValueKind::String );
// This overload supports setting expandable string values. Compare
// the output from this value with the previous string value.
rk->SetValue( "ExpandedStringValue", "The path is %PATH%", RegistryValueKind::ExpandString );
// Display all the name/value pairs stored in the test key, with the
// registry data type in parentheses.
//
array<String^>^valueNames = rk->GetValueNames();
System::Collections::IEnumerator^ myEnum = valueNames->GetEnumerator();
while ( myEnum->MoveNext() )
{
String^ s = safe_cast<String^>(myEnum->Current);
RegistryValueKind rvk = rk->GetValueKind( s );
switch ( rvk )
{
case RegistryValueKind::MultiString:
{
array<String^>^values = (array<String^>^)rk->GetValue( s );
Console::Write( "\r\n {0} ({1}) =", s, rvk );
for ( int i = 0; i < values->Length; i++ )
{
if (i != 0) Console::Write(",");
Console::Write( " \"{0}\"", values[ i ] );
}
Console::WriteLine();
break;
}
case RegistryValueKind::Binary:
{
array<Byte>^bytes = (array<Byte>^)rk->GetValue( s );
Console::Write( "\r\n {0} ({1}) =", s, rvk );
for ( int i = 0; i < bytes->Length; i++ )
{
// Display each byte as two hexadecimal digits.
Console::Write( " {0:X2}", bytes[ i ] );
}
Console::WriteLine();
break;
}
default:
Console::WriteLine( "\r\n {0} ({1}) = {2}", s, rvk, rk->GetValue( s ) );
break;
}
}
}
/*
This code example produces the following output:
QuadWordValue (QWord) = 42
DWordValue (DWord) = 42
MultipleStringValue (MultiString) =, "One", "Two", "Three"
BinaryValue (Binary) = 0A 2B 2C 2D 0E FF
StringValue (String) = The path is %PATH%
ExpandedStringValue (ExpandString) = The path is C:\Program Files\Microsoft.NET\SDK\v2.0\Bin;
[***The remainder of this output is omitted.***]
*/
using System;
using Microsoft.Win32;
public class Example
{
public static void Main()
{
// Delete and recreate the test key.
Registry.CurrentUser.DeleteSubKey("RegistryValueKindExample", false);
RegistryKey rk = Registry.CurrentUser.CreateSubKey("RegistryValueKindExample");
// Create name/value pairs.
// This overload supports QWord (long) values.
rk.SetValue("QuadWordValue", 42, RegistryValueKind.QWord);
// The following SetValue calls have the same effect as using the
// SetValue overload that does not specify RegistryValueKind.
//
rk.SetValue("DWordValue", 42, RegistryValueKind.DWord);
rk.SetValue("MultipleStringValue", new string[] {"One", "Two", "Three"}, RegistryValueKind.MultiString);
rk.SetValue("BinaryValue", new byte[] {10, 43, 44, 45, 14, 255}, RegistryValueKind.Binary);
rk.SetValue("StringValue", "The path is %PATH%", RegistryValueKind.String);
// This overload supports setting expandable string values. Compare
// the output from this value with the previous string value.
rk.SetValue("ExpandedStringValue", "The path is %PATH%", RegistryValueKind.ExpandString);
// Display all name/value pairs stored in the test key, with each
// registry data type in parentheses.
//
string[] valueNames = rk.GetValueNames();
foreach (string s in valueNames)
{
RegistryValueKind rvk = rk.GetValueKind(s);
switch (rvk)
{
case RegistryValueKind.MultiString :
string[] values = (string[]) rk.GetValue(s);
Console.Write("\r\n {0} ({1}) =", s, rvk);
for (int i = 0; i < values.Length; i++)
{
if (i != 0) Console.Write(",");
Console.Write(" \"{0}\"", values[i]);
}
Console.WriteLine();
break;
case RegistryValueKind.Binary :
byte[] bytes = (byte[]) rk.GetValue(s);
Console.Write("\r\n {0} ({1}) =", s, rvk);
for (int i = 0; i < bytes.Length; i++)
{
// Display each byte as two hexadecimal digits.
Console.Write(" {0:X2}", bytes[i]);
}
Console.WriteLine();
break;
default :
Console.WriteLine("\r\n {0} ({1}) = {2}", s, rvk, rk.GetValue(s));
break;
}
}
}
}
/*
This code example produces the following output:
QuadWordValue (QWord) = 42
DWordValue (DWord) = 42
MultipleStringValue (MultiString) =, "One", "Two", "Three"
BinaryValue (Binary) = 0A 2B 2C 2D 0E FF
StringValue (String) = The path is %PATH%
ExpandedStringValue (ExpandString) = The path is C:\Program Files\Microsoft.NET\SDK\v2.0\Bin;
[***The remainder of this output is omitted.***]
*/
Imports Microsoft.Win32
Public Class Example
Public Shared Sub Main()
' Delete and recreate the test key.
Registry.CurrentUser.DeleteSubKey("RegistryValueKindExample", False)
Dim rk As RegistryKey = Registry.CurrentUser.CreateSubKey("RegistryValueKindExample")
' Create name/value pairs.
' This overload supports QWord (long) values.
rk.SetValue("QuadWordValue", 42, RegistryValueKind.QWord)
' The following SetValue calls have the same effect as using the
' SetValue overload that does not specify RegistryValueKind.
'
rk.SetValue("DWordValue", 42, RegistryValueKind.DWord)
rk.SetValue("MultipleStringValue", New String() {"One", "Two", "Three"}, RegistryValueKind.MultiString)
rk.SetValue("BinaryValue", New Byte() {10, 43, 44, 45, 14, 255}, RegistryValueKind.Binary)
rk.SetValue("StringValue", "The path is %PATH%", RegistryValueKind.String)
' This overload supports setting expandable string values. Compare
' the output from this value with the previous string value.
rk.SetValue("ExpandedStringValue", "The path is %PATH%", RegistryValueKind.ExpandString)
' Display all name/value pairs stored in the test key, with each
' registry data type in parentheses.
'
Dim valueNames As String() = rk.GetValueNames()
Dim s As String
For Each s In valueNames
Dim rvk As RegistryValueKind = rk.GetValueKind(s)
Select Case rvk
Case RegistryValueKind.MultiString
Dim values As String() = CType(rk.GetValue(s), String())
Console.Write(vbCrLf & " {0} ({1}) =", s, rvk)
For i As Integer = 0 To values.Length - 1
If i <> 0 Then Console.Write(",")
Console.Write(" ""{0}""", values(i))
Next i
Console.WriteLine()
Case RegistryValueKind.Binary
Dim bytes As Byte() = CType(rk.GetValue(s), Byte())
Console.Write(vbCrLf & " {0} ({1}) =", s, rvk)
For i As Integer = 0 To bytes.Length - 1
' Display each byte as two hexadecimal digits.
Console.Write(" {0:X2}", bytes(i))
Next i
Console.WriteLine()
Case Else
Console.WriteLine(vbCrLf & " {0} ({1}) = {2}", s, rvk, rk.GetValue(s))
End Select
Next s
End Sub
End Class
'
'This code example produces the following output (some output is omitted):
'
' QuadWordValue (QWord) = 42
'
' DWordValue (DWord) = 42
'
' MultipleStringValue (MultiString) = "One", "Two", "Three"
'
' BinaryValue (Binary) = 0A 2B 2C 2D 0E FF
'
' StringValue (String) = The path is %PATH%
'
' ExpandedStringValue (ExpandString) = The path is C:\Program Files\Microsoft.NET\SDK\v2.0\Bin;
' [***The remainder of this output is omitted.***]
Remarks
Note
A registry key can have one value that is not associated with any name. When this unnamed value is displayed in the registry editor, the string "(Default)" appears instead of a name. To retrieve the registry data type of this unnamed value, specify either null
or the empty string ("") for name
.
For a description of supported registry data types, please see the RegistryValueKind enumeration.