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I have some files I added to the resources of my application. These files have the "Copy to Output Directory" property set to "Copy always", so the files will appear in the applicationDirectiry/Resources directory.

What I want is access to those files. Of course I could use the following code:

Environment.CurrentDirectory 
 + Path.DirectorySeparatorChar
 + "Resources\ResourceFileName.xslt";

The problem here is, that if I want to rename a file or the \Resources directory, I would have to modify all strings.

EDIT: For example I have a MasterData.xslt file in my resources. After the build it will placed in the _ApplicationFolder\Resources_ directory. The path to that file is ApplicationFolder\Resources\MasterData.xslt. In my code I can access the content of that file by using

Resources.MasterData

Is there a way to get the file path (ApplicationFolder\Resources\MasterData.xslt) instead of its content?

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2 Answers 2

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When you place the files there during a Build, the location should be considered a 'magical' constant.

Just use a const string resFolder = "Resources"; somewhere so that you have a Single Point of Definition.

OT: And use System.IO.Path.Combine() to construct file-paths:

 string myPath = Path.Combine(Environment.CurrentDirectory, 
        resFolder, "ResourceFileName.xslt");
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  • Not answerable from the question. It drops from the sky as a constant. Oct 16, 2012 at 13:32
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If Resources is a sub-directory below your application's runtime directory, you can do this:

string fileName = 
    System.Reflection.Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly().Location +    
    Path.DirectorySeparatorChar + 
    "Resources" + 
    Path.DirectorySeparatorChar +
    "ResourceFileName.xslt";

Note also I used Path.DirectorySeparatorChar twice instead of the "\".

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