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ProcessStartInfo.Arguments Propiedad

Definición

Obtiene o establece el conjunto de argumentos de línea de comandos que se van a usar al iniciar la aplicación.

public:
 property System::String ^ Arguments { System::String ^ get(); void set(System::String ^ value); };
public string Arguments { get; set; }
[System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter("System.Diagnostics.Design.StringValueConverter, System.Design, Version=1.0.5000.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a")]
public string Arguments { get; set; }
[System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter("System.Diagnostics.Design.StringValueConverter, System.Design, Version=2.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a")]
public string Arguments { get; set; }
[System.ComponentModel.SettingsBindable(true)]
[System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter("System.Diagnostics.Design.StringValueConverter, System.Design, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a")]
public string Arguments { get; set; }
[System.ComponentModel.SettingsBindable(true)]
public string Arguments { get; set; }
member this.Arguments : string with get, set
[<System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter("System.Diagnostics.Design.StringValueConverter, System.Design, Version=1.0.5000.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a")>]
member this.Arguments : string with get, set
[<System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter("System.Diagnostics.Design.StringValueConverter, System.Design, Version=2.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a")>]
member this.Arguments : string with get, set
[<System.ComponentModel.SettingsBindable(true)>]
[<System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter("System.Diagnostics.Design.StringValueConverter, System.Design, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a")>]
member this.Arguments : string with get, set
[<System.ComponentModel.SettingsBindable(true)>]
member this.Arguments : string with get, set
Public Property Arguments As String

Valor de propiedad

Cadena única que contiene los argumentos para pasar a la aplicación de destino especificada en la propiedad FileName. El valor predeterminado es una cadena vacía ("").

Atributos

Ejemplos

En el primer ejemplo se crea una aplicación pequeña (argsecho.exe) que devuelve sus argumentos a la consola. En el segundo ejemplo se crea una aplicación que invoca argsecho.exe para mostrar diferentes variaciones para la Arguments propiedad .

// Place this code into a console project called ArgsEcho to build the argsecho.exe target

using namespace System;

int main(array<System::String ^> ^args)
{
    Console::WriteLine("Received the following arguments:\n");

    for (int i = 0; i < args->Length; i++)
    {
        Console::WriteLine("[" + i + "] = " + args[i]);
    }

    Console::WriteLine("\nPress any key to exit");
    Console::ReadLine();
    return 0;
}
// Place this code into a console project called ArgsEcho to build the argsecho.exe target

using System;

namespace StartArgs
{
    class ArgsEcho
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Received the following arguments:\n");

            for (var i = 0; i < args.Length; i++)
            {
                Console.WriteLine($"[{i}] = {args[i]}");
            }

            Console.WriteLine("\nPress any key to exit");
            Console.ReadLine();
        }
    }
}
' Place this code into a console project called ArgsEcho to build the argsecho.exe target

Module Module1
    Sub Main()
        Dim i As Integer = 0

        For Each s As String In My.Application.CommandLineArgs
            Console.WriteLine($"[{i}] = {s}")
            i = i + 1
        Next

        Console.WriteLine(Environment.NewLine + "Press any key to exit")
        Console.ReadLine()
    End Sub
End Module
// Place the following code into a console project called StartArgsEcho. It depends on the
// console application named argsecho.exe.

using namespace System;
using namespace System::Diagnostics;

int main()
{
    ProcessStartInfo^ startInfo = gcnew ProcessStartInfo("argsecho.exe");
    startInfo->WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle::Normal;

    // Start with one argument.
    // Output of ArgsEcho:
    //  [0]=/a            
    startInfo->Arguments = "/a";
    Process::Start(startInfo);

    // Start with multiple arguments separated by spaces.
    // Output of ArgsEcho:
    //  [0] = /a
    //  [1] = /b
    //  [2] = c:\temp
    startInfo->Arguments = "/a /b c:\\temp";
    Process::Start(startInfo);

    // An argument with spaces inside quotes is interpreted as multiple arguments.
    // Output of ArgsEcho:
    //  [0] = /a
    //  [1] = literal string arg
    startInfo->Arguments = "/a \"literal string arg\"";
    Process::Start(startInfo);

    // An argument inside double quotes is interpreted as if the quote weren't there,
    // that is, as separate arguments. 
    // Output of ArgsEcho:
    //  [0] = /a
    //  [1] = /b:string
    //  [2] = in
    //  [3] = double
    //  [4] = quotes
    startInfo->Arguments = "/a /b:\"\"string in double quotes\"\"";
    Process::Start(startInfo);

    // Triple-escape quotation marks to include the character in the final argument received
    // by the target process.
    //  [0] = /a
    //  [1] = /b:"quoted string"
    startInfo->Arguments = "/a /b:\"\"\"quoted string\"\"\"";
    Process::Start(startInfo);

    return 0;
}
// Place this code into a console project called StartArgsEcho. It depends on the
// console application named argsecho.exe.

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using System.Diagnostics;

namespace StartArgsEcho
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main()
        {
            ProcessStartInfo startInfo = new ProcessStartInfo("argsecho.exe");
            startInfo.WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle.Normal;

            // Start with one argument.
            // Output of ArgsEcho:
            //  [0]=/a
            startInfo.Arguments = "/a";
            Process.Start(startInfo);

            // Start with multiple arguments separated by spaces.
            // Output of ArgsEcho:
            //  [0] = /a
            //  [1] = /b
            //  [2] = c:\temp
            startInfo.Arguments = "/a /b c:\\temp";
            Process.Start(startInfo);

            // An argument with spaces inside quotes is interpreted as multiple arguments.
            // Output of ArgsEcho:
            //  [0] = /a
            //  [1] = literal string arg
            startInfo.Arguments = "/a \"literal string arg\"";
            Process.Start(startInfo);

            // An argument inside double quotes is interpreted as if the quote weren't there,
            // that is, as separate arguments. Equivalent verbatim string is @"/a /b:""string with quotes"""
            // Output of ArgsEcho:
            //  [0] = /a
            //  [1] = /b:string
            //  [2] = in
            //  [3] = double
            //  [4] = quotes
            startInfo.Arguments = "/a /b:\"\"string in double quotes\"\"";
            Process.Start(startInfo);

            // Triple-escape quotation marks to include the character in the final argument received
            // by the target process. Equivalent verbatim string: @"/a /b:""""""quoted string""""""";
            //  [0] = /a
            //  [1] = /b:"quoted string"
            startInfo.Arguments = "/a /b:\"\"\"quoted string\"\"\"";
            Process.Start(startInfo);
        }
    }
}
' Place this code into a console project called StartArgsEcho. It depends on the
' console application named argsecho.exe.

Module Module1
    Sub Main()
        Dim startInfo As ProcessStartInfo = New ProcessStartInfo("argsecho.exe")
        startInfo.WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle.Normal

        ' Start with one argument.
        ' Output of ArgsEcho:
        '  [0]=/a            
        startInfo.Arguments = "/a"
        Process.Start(startInfo)

        ' Start with multiple arguments separated by spaces.
        ' Output of ArgsEcho:
        '  [0] = /a
        '  [1] = /b
        '  [2] = c:\temp
        startInfo.Arguments = "/a /b c:\temp"
        Process.Start(startInfo)

        ' An argument with spaces inside quotes is interpreted as multiple arguments.
        ' Output of ArgsEcho:
        '  [0] = /a
        '  [1] = literal string arg
        startInfo.Arguments = "/a ""literal string arg"" "
        Process.Start(startInfo)

        ' An argument inside double quotes is interpreted as if the quote weren't there,
        ' that is, as separate arguments.
        ' Output of ArgsEcho:
        '  [0] = /a
        '  [1] = /b:string
        '  [2] = in
        '  [3] = double
        '  [4] = quotes
        startInfo.Arguments = "/a /b:""""string in double quotes"""" "
        Process.Start(startInfo)

        ' Triple-escape quotation marks to include the character in the final argument received
        ' by the target process. 
        '  [0] = /a
        '  [1] = /b:"quoted string"
        startInfo.Arguments = "/a /b:""""""quoted string"""""" "
        Process.Start(startInfo)
    End Sub
End Module

Comentarios

La longitud de la cadena asignada a la Arguments propiedad debe ser inferior a 32 699.

Los argumentos se analizan e interpretan mediante la aplicación de destino, por lo que deben estar en línea con las expectativas de la aplicación. En el caso de las aplicaciones .NET como se muestra en los ejemplos siguientes, los espacios se interpretan como un separador entre varios argumentos. Un solo argumento que incluye espacios debe incluirse entre comillas, pero las comillas no se llevan a cabo en la aplicación de destino. Para incluir comillas en el argumento analizado final, escape triple cada marca. Si usa esta propiedad para establecer argumentos de línea de comandos, ArgumentList no debe contener ningún elemento.

Arguments y ArgumentList, que se admite a partir de .NET Core 2.1 y .NET Standard 2.1, son independientes entre sí. Es decir, la cadena asignada a la Arguments propiedad no rellena la ArgumentList colección y los miembros de la ArgumentList colección no se asignan a la Arguments propiedad .

Importante

Usar una instancia de este objeto con datos que no son de confianza supone un riesgo de seguridad. Utilice este objeto solo con datos de confianza. Para obtener más información, vea Validar todas las entradas.

Se aplica a