Is there a way in Delphi to get the currect application's exe size in one or two lines of code?
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Just for grins...you can also do this with streams Just slightly more than 2 lines of code. Generally the application filename including path is also stored into Paramstr(0).
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Unfortunatly it is not possible to do that with only one or two lines of code without using some library. The easy part is getting the application's exe file. You can find it in In general there are several possibilities for retrieving the file size:
In the JCL library you can find many useful functions, including a simple function which returns the file size of a given file name. (It uses a method which suits the given platform) |
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You can try this:
=============== |
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Streams can also be used without a TFileStream variable:
Ugly, yes. I prefer using DSiFileSize from DSiWin32. It uses CreateFile internally:
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It's not as small as you want, but it needs no handles. I use this in all my "SFX" archivers and programs that must know their size. IIRC it requires the Windows unit. function GetExeSize: cardinal;
var
p: pchar;
i, NumSections: integer;
const
IMAGE_PE_SIGNATURE = $00004550;
begin
result := 0;
p := pointer(hinstance);
inc(p, PImageDosHeader(p)._lfanew + sizeof(dword));
NumSections := PImageFileHeader(p).NumberOfSections;
inc(p,sizeof(TImageFileHeader)+ sizeof(TImageOptionalHeader));
for i := 1 to NumSections do
begin
with PImageSectionHeader(p)^ do
if PointerToRawData+SizeOfRawData > result then
result := PointerToRawData+SizeOfRawData;
inc(p, sizeof(TImageSectionHeader));
end;
end;
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For the sake of future compatibility, you should choose an implementation that does not require pointers or Windows API functions when possible. The TFileStream based solution provided by skamradt looks good to me. But... You shouldn't worry too much whether the routine is 1 or 10 lines of code, because you're going to encapsulate it anyway in a function that takes a filename as a parameter and returns an Int64, and put it in your personal library of reusable code. Then you can call it like so: GetMyFileSize(Application.ExeName); |
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I would like to modify the code provided by skamradt, to make it two lines of code as you requested ;-)
but I would prefer to use the code as skamradt wrote, because it's more safe |
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Shortest I could do. Note that the .Size is in bytes, so for kilobytes, divide by 1024.
Check out this link. |
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