Seems everyone assumes you have to use Isolated Storage on Windows Phone 8, but I haven't found the why. I've also used some code I was porting, and conventional File.CreateText(Windows.ApplicationModel.Package.Current.InstalledLocation)
seems to work fine.
So in code, everyone seems to be doing this (from developer.nokia.com):
IsolatedStorageFile fileStorage = IsolatedStorageFile.GetUserStoreForApplication();
StreamWriter Writer = new StreamWriter(new IsolatedStorageFileStream("TestFile.txt", FileMode.OpenOrCreate, fileStorage));
Writer.WriteLine(textBox1.Text);
Writer.Close();
That's actually exceptionally tame. I've seen too many beginner tutorials that makes that async
, and can't figure out why. The above code is presented within a WP7 context, however.
UPDATE: Though the below code worked on WP8 (HTC 8XT) and WP8.1 (Lumia 640) when run from Visual Studio, when I deployed to the store, it blew up immediately when I tried to save to a file.
The below code seems to work just as well, at least on the WP emulator, my HTC 8XT running Windows Phone 8, and my Lumia 640 running WP 8.1. Code below can be seen in marginally better context at this link, but this is the important stuff. Yes, I'm using some hungarian. Sorry. Obviously your page needs to have a TextBox named
txtText
and a global called strFileLoc
.
Windows.ApplicationModel.Package package =
Windows.ApplicationModel.Package.Current;
Windows.Storage.StorageFolder installedLocation =
package.InstalledLocation;
this.strFileLoc = Path.Combine(installedLocation.Path,
"myFile.txt");
string strToWrite = this.txtText.Text;
using (StreamWriter sw = File.CreateText(this.strFileLoc))
{
sw.WriteLine(strToWrite);
sw.Close();
}
// Load
string strText = string.Empty;
if (File.Exists(this.strFileLoc))
{
using (StreamReader sr =
new StreamReader(File.OpenRead(this.strFileLoc)))
{
strText = sr.ReadToEnd();
}
}
else
{
strText = "File doesn't exist";
}
this.txtText.Text = strText;
Can this be used in a production app? Why or why not?
this.txtPrice.Text
. /sigh I only do it for personal projects, I swear!