Console.CancelKeyPress Event
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.
public:
static event ConsoleCancelEventHandler ^ CancelKeyPress;
[System.Runtime.Versioning.UnsupportedOSPlatform("browser")]
public static event ConsoleCancelEventHandler? CancelKeyPress;
[System.Runtime.Versioning.UnsupportedOSPlatform("browser")]
[System.Runtime.Versioning.UnsupportedOSPlatform("android")]
[System.Runtime.Versioning.UnsupportedOSPlatform("ios")]
[System.Runtime.Versioning.UnsupportedOSPlatform("tvos")]
public static event ConsoleCancelEventHandler? CancelKeyPress;
public static event ConsoleCancelEventHandler CancelKeyPress;
[<System.Runtime.Versioning.UnsupportedOSPlatform("browser")>]
member this.CancelKeyPress : ConsoleCancelEventHandler
[<System.Runtime.Versioning.UnsupportedOSPlatform("browser")>]
[<System.Runtime.Versioning.UnsupportedOSPlatform("android")>]
[<System.Runtime.Versioning.UnsupportedOSPlatform("ios")>]
[<System.Runtime.Versioning.UnsupportedOSPlatform("tvos")>]
member this.CancelKeyPress : ConsoleCancelEventHandler
member this.CancelKeyPress : ConsoleCancelEventHandler
Public Shared Custom Event CancelKeyPress As ConsoleCancelEventHandler
Event Type
- Attributes
Examples
The following example demonstrates how the CancelKeyPress event is used. When you press Ctrl+C, the read operation is interrupted and the myHandler
event handler is invoked. Upon entry to the event handler, the ConsoleCancelEventArgs.Cancel property is false
, which means that the current process will terminate when the event handler terminates. However, the event handler sets the ConsoleCancelEventArgs.Cancel property to true
, which means that the process will not terminate and the read operation will resume.
using namespace System;
void OnCancelKeyPressed(Object^ sender,
ConsoleCancelEventArgs^ args)
{
Console::WriteLine("{0}The read operation has been interrupted.",
Environment::NewLine);
Console::WriteLine(" Key pressed: {0}", args->SpecialKey);
Console::WriteLine(" Cancel property: {0}", args->Cancel);
// Set the Cancel property to true to prevent the process from
// terminating.
Console::WriteLine("Setting the Cancel property to true...");
args->Cancel = true;
// Announce the new value of the Cancel property.
Console::WriteLine(" Cancel property: {0}", args->Cancel);
Console::WriteLine("The read operation will resume...{0}",
Environment::NewLine);
}
int main()
{
// Clear the screen.
Console::Clear();
// Establish an event handler to process key press events.
Console::CancelKeyPress +=
gcnew ConsoleCancelEventHandler(OnCancelKeyPressed);
while (true)
{
// Prompt the user.
Console::Write("Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or ");
Console::WriteLine("CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:");
// Start a console read operation. Do not display the input.
ConsoleKeyInfo^ keyInfo = Console::ReadKey(true);
// Announce the name of the key that was pressed .
Console::WriteLine(" Key pressed: {0}{1}", keyInfo->Key,
Environment::NewLine);
// Exit if the user pressed the 'X' key.
if (keyInfo->Key == ConsoleKey::X)
{
break;
}
}
}
// The example displays output similar to the following:
// Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
// Key pressed: J
//
// Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
// Key pressed: Enter
//
// Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
//
// The read operation has been interrupted.
// Key pressed: ControlC
// Cancel property: False
// Setting the Cancel property to true...
// Cancel property: True
// The read operation will resume...
//
// Key pressed: Q
//
// Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
// Key pressed: X
using System;
class Sample
{
public static void Main()
{
ConsoleKeyInfo cki;
Console.Clear();
// Establish an event handler to process key press events.
Console.CancelKeyPress += new ConsoleCancelEventHandler(myHandler);
while (true)
{
Console.Write("Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or ");
Console.WriteLine("CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:");
// Start a console read operation. Do not display the input.
cki = Console.ReadKey(true);
// Announce the name of the key that was pressed .
Console.WriteLine($" Key pressed: {cki.Key}\n");
// Exit if the user pressed the 'X' key.
if (cki.Key == ConsoleKey.X) break;
}
}
protected static void myHandler(object sender, ConsoleCancelEventArgs args)
{
Console.WriteLine("\nThe read operation has been interrupted.");
Console.WriteLine($" Key pressed: {args.SpecialKey}");
Console.WriteLine($" Cancel property: {args.Cancel}");
// Set the Cancel property to true to prevent the process from terminating.
Console.WriteLine("Setting the Cancel property to true...");
args.Cancel = true;
// Announce the new value of the Cancel property.
Console.WriteLine($" Cancel property: {args.Cancel}");
Console.WriteLine("The read operation will resume...\n");
}
}
// The example displays output similar to the following:
// Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
// Key pressed: J
//
// Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
// Key pressed: Enter
//
// Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
//
// The read operation has been interrupted.
// Key pressed: ControlC
// Cancel property: False
// Setting the Cancel property to true...
// Cancel property: True
// The read operation will resume...
//
// Key pressed: Q
//
// Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
// Key pressed: X
open System
let myHandler sender (args: ConsoleCancelEventArgs) =
printfn "\nThe read operation has been interrupted."
printfn $" Key pressed: {args.SpecialKey}"
printfn $" Cancel property: {args.Cancel}"
// Set the Cancel property to true to prevent the process from terminating.
printfn "Setting the Cancel property to true..."
args.Cancel <- true
// Announce the new value of the Cancel property.
printfn $" Cancel property: {args.Cancel}"
printfn "The read operation will resume...\n"
// Establish an event handler to process key press events.
Console.CancelKeyPress.AddHandler(ConsoleCancelEventHandler myHandler)
let mutable quit = false
while not quit do
printf "Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or "
printfn "CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:"
// Start a console read operation. Do not display the input.
let cki = Console.ReadKey true
// Announce the name of the key that was pressed .
printfn $" Key pressed: {cki.Key}\n"
// Exit if the user pressed the 'X' key.
if cki.Key = ConsoleKey.X then
quit <- true
// The example displays output similar to the following:
// Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
// Key pressed: J
//
// Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
// Key pressed: Enter
//
// Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
//
// The read operation has been interrupted.
// Key pressed: ControlC
// Cancel property: False
// Setting the Cancel property to true...
// Cancel property: True
// The read operation will resume...
//
// Key pressed: Q
//
// Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
// Key pressed: X
Class Sample
Public Shared Sub Main()
Dim cki As ConsoleKeyInfo
Console.Clear()
' Establish an event handler to process key press events.
AddHandler Console.CancelKeyPress, AddressOf myHandler
While True
Console.Write("Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or ")
Console.WriteLine("CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:")
' Start a console read operation. Do not display the input.
cki = Console.ReadKey(True)
' Announce the name of the key that was pressed .
Console.WriteLine($" Key pressed: {cki.Key}{vbCrLf}")
' Exit if the user pressed the 'X' key.
If cki.Key = ConsoleKey.X Then Exit While
End While
End Sub
Protected Shared Sub myHandler(ByVal sender As Object, _
ByVal args As ConsoleCancelEventArgs)
Console.WriteLine($"{vbCrLf}The read operation has been interrupted.")
Console.WriteLine($" Key pressed: {args.SpecialKey}")
Console.WriteLine($" Cancel property: {args.Cancel}")
' Set the Cancel property to true to prevent the process from terminating.
Console.WriteLine("Setting the Cancel property to true...")
args.Cancel = True
' Announce the new value of the Cancel property.
Console.WriteLine($" Cancel property: {args.Cancel}")
Console.WriteLine($"The read operation will resume...{vbCrLf}")
End Sub
End Class
' The example diplays output similar to the following:
' Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
' Key pressed: J
'
' Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
' Key pressed: Enter
'
' Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
'
' The read operation has been interrupted.
' Key pressed: ControlC
' Cancel property: False
' Setting the Cancel property to true...
' Cancel property: True
' The read operation will resume...
'
' Key pressed: Q
'
' Press any key, or 'X' to quit, or CTRL+C to interrupt the read operation:
' Key pressed: X
Remarks
This event is used in conjunction with System.ConsoleCancelEventHandler and System.ConsoleCancelEventArgs. The CancelKeyPress event enables a console application to intercept the Ctrl+C signal so the event handler can decide whether to continue executing or terminate. For more information about handling events, see Handling and Raising Events.
When the user presses either Ctrl+C or Ctrl+Break, the CancelKeyPress event is fired and the application's ConsoleCancelEventHandler event handler is executed. The event handler is passed a ConsoleCancelEventArgs object that has two useful properties:
SpecialKey, which allows you to determine whether the handler was invoked as a result of the user pressing Ctrl+C (the property value is ConsoleSpecialKey.ControlC) or Ctrl+Break (the property value is ConsoleSpecialKey.ControlBreak).
Cancel, which allows you to determine how your application should respond to the user pressing Ctrl+C or Ctrl+Break. By default, the Cancel property is
false
, which causes program execution to terminate when the event handler exits. Changing its property totrue
specifies that the application should continue to execute.
Tip
If your application has simple requirements, you can use the TreatControlCAsInput property instead of this event. By setting this property to false
, you can ensure that your application always exits if the user presses Ctrl+C. By setting it to true
, you can ensure that pressing Ctrl+C will not terminate the application.
The event handler for this event is executed on a thread pool thread.