ProcessStartInfo.Environment Property
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.
Gets the environment variables that apply to this process and its child processes.
public:
property System::Collections::Generic::IDictionary<System::String ^, System::String ^> ^ Environment { System::Collections::Generic::IDictionary<System::String ^, System::String ^> ^ get(); };
public System.Collections.Generic.IDictionary<string,string?> Environment { get; }
public System.Collections.Generic.IDictionary<string,string> Environment { get; }
member this.Environment : System.Collections.Generic.IDictionary<string, string>
Public ReadOnly Property Environment As IDictionary(Of String, String)
Property Value
A generic dictionary containing the environment variables that apply to this process and its child processes. The default is null
.
Remarks
The environment variables contain search paths for files, directories for temporary files, application-specific options, and other similar information. Although you cannot directly set the Environment property, you can modify the generic dictionary returned by the property. For example, the following code adds a TempPath environment variable: myProcess.StartInfo.Environment.Add("TempPath", "C:\\Temp")
. You must set the UseShellExecute property to false
to start the process after changing the Environment property. If UseShellExecute is true
, an InvalidOperationException is thrown when the Start method is called.
On .NET Framework applications, using the Environment property is the same as using the EnvironmentVariables property.