CCommandLineInfo::ParseParam
The framework calls this function to parse/interpret individual parameters from the command line. The second version differs from the first only in Unicode projects.
virtual void ParseParam(
const char* pszParam,
BOOL bFlag,
BOOL bLast
);
virtual void ParseParam(
const TCHAR* pszParam,
BOOL bFlag,
BOOL bLast
);
Parameters
pszParam
The parameter or flag.bFlag
Indicates whether pszParam is a parameter or a flag.bLast
Indicates if this is the last parameter or flag on the command line.
Remarks
CWinApp::ParseCommandLine calls ParseParam once for each parameter or flag on the command line, passing the argument to pszParam. If the first character of the parameter is a '-' or a '/', then it is removed and bFlag is set to TRUE. When parsing the final parameter, bLast is set to TRUE.
The default implementation of this function recognizes the following flags: /p, /pt, /dde, /Automation, and /Embedding, as shown in the following table:
Command-line argument |
Command executed |
---|---|
app |
New file. |
app filename |
Open file. |
app /p filename |
Print file to default printer. |
app /pt filename printer driver port |
Print file to the specified printer. |
app /dde |
Start up and await DDE command. |
app /Automation |
Start up as an OLE automation server. |
app /Embedding |
Start up to edit an embedded OLE item. |
app /Register app /Regserver |
Informs the application to perform any registration tasks. |
app /Unregister app /Unregserver |
Informs the application to perform any un-registration tasks. |
This information is stored in m_bRunAutomated, m_bRunEmbedded, and m_nShellCommand. Flags are marked by either a forward-slash '/' or hyphen '-'.
The default implementation puts the first non-flag parameter into m_strFileName. In the case of the /pt flag, the default implementation puts the second, third, and fourth non-flag parameters into m_strPrinterName, m_strDriverName, and m_strPortName, respectively.
The default implementation also sets m_bShowSplash to TRUE only in the case of a new file. In the case of a new file, the user has taken action involving the application itself. In any other case, including opening existing files using the shell, the user action involves the file directly. In a document-centric standpoint, the splash screen does not need to announce the application starting up.
Override this function in your derived class to handle other flag and parameter values.
Requirements
Header: afxwin.h