2

Im trying to create a windows form that has a button when clicked will display a folder/file browes window, then the user selects the file/folder and clicks OK and i can then use the selected path as a string for another script.

the problem is that when i run it through PowerGUI (powershell scripting app) it works fine, but when i run through windows powershell it hangs when loading the browse dialog, anyone seen this before or see what ive done wrong or got an alternative, any help would be appreciated.

cls
$button = $browse = $form = 0
[void][reflection.assembly]::LoadWithPartialName("System.Windows.Forms")
$browse = new-object system.windows.Forms.FolderBrowserDialog
$browse.RootFolder = [System.Environment+SpecialFolder]'MyComputer'
$browse.ShowNewFolderButton = $false
$browse.selectedPath = "C:\"
$browse.Description = "Choose a directory"

$button1 = New-Object system.Windows.Forms.Button
$button1.Text = "Choose Directory"
$button1.Add_Click({$browse.ShowDialog()})
$button1.left = 20
$button1.top = 20

$form = New-Object system.windows.forms.Form
$form.controls.add($button1)
$form.ShowDialog()
$form.Dispose()

$browse.SelectedPath
3
  • I'm on windows7 x32, powershell v3.0 and your code works in console and in ISE.
    – CB.
    Jan 27, 2013 at 17:12
  • Script works fine on my Windows 7 x64 and PowerShell 2.0 console. Is it possible that PowerGui has installed something that may be keeping your script from executing? Also try adding { $ErrorActionPreference = Inquire } to find out if any errors are passing you by? Or use some { write-hosts "xxxxx" } to get a better idea of where your app is hanging and then update your question.
    – malgca
    Jan 27, 2013 at 17:45
  • yep my powershell comand screen keeps running as version 1 but when i do $psversiontable in PS i can see, i have V2 installed but my script does not run as V2 strange :|
    – Kam0106
    Jan 27, 2013 at 18:17

4 Answers 4

2

I was having a similar problem when running my script through PowerShellPlus (anther powershell editor). Luckily I found this post that shows how to prompt for a folder without using the FolderBrowserDialog. Here's the code that I'm using in a set of powershell functions I've written for prompting the user for many different kinds of input via a GUI.

# Show an Open Folder Dialog and return the directory selected by the user.
function Read-FolderBrowserDialog([string]$Message, [string]$InitialDirectory)
{
    $app = New-Object -ComObject Shell.Application
    $folder = $app.BrowseForFolder(0, $Message, 0, $InitialDirectory)
    if ($folder) { return $folder.Self.Path } else { return '' }
}
1
  • Nice shell based solution, instead of using .NET Windows Forms!
    – Jaans
    May 13, 2014 at 6:55
1

Your code works when I try it. However I have noticed that sometimes(especially the 2nd time in a session) I use a browsewindow, it is hidden behind the PowerShell console and it seems like it's stuck. So can you try moving your powershell console to the side when it "hangs"?

Also, as a suggestion: if you're only using the form to select a folder location, I would skip it. You won't recieve the browser value until you close the form anyways, so try something like this instead:

function Get-BrowseLocation
{
    [Reflection.Assembly]::LoadWithPartialName("System.Windows.Forms") | Out-Null
    [System.Windows.Forms.Application]::EnableVisualStyles()
    $browse = New-Object System.Windows.Forms.FolderBrowserDialog
    $browse.RootFolder = [System.Environment+SpecialFolder]'MyComputer'
    $browse.ShowNewFolderButton = $false
    $browse.Description = "Choose a directory"

    $loop = $true
    while($loop)
    {
        if ($browse.ShowDialog() -eq "OK")
        {
            $loop = $false
        } else
        {
            $res = [System.Windows.Forms.MessageBox]::Show("You clicked Cancel. Try again or exit script?", "Choose a directory", [System.Windows.Forms.MessageBoxButtons]::RetryCancel)
            if($res -eq "Cancel")
            {
                #End script
                return
            }
        }
    }
    $browse.SelectedPath
    $browse.Dispose()
}

PS > Get-BrowseLocation
D:\
1

If you make the following changes to the function provided by Frode. F, the dialog will always come to the top.

$topform = New-Object System.Windows.Forms.Form
$topform.Topmost = $true
$topform.MinimizeBox = $true

$loop = $true
while($loop)
{
    if ($browse.ShowDialog($topform) -eq "OK")
0

I think you're experiencing the issue I've faced, which is addressed in this question

The answer suggests setting .ShowHelp to $true, like this:

$openFileDialog = New-Object System.Windows.Forms.openFileDialog
$openFileDialog.ShowHelp = $true
$openFileDialog.ShowDialog() | Out-Null
1
  • This trick only works for the OpenFileDialog; the FolderBrowserDialog does not have a ShowHelp property that can be set to true.
    – deadlydog
    May 17, 2013 at 18:20

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