You can use Component.DesignMode to check this. However, be aware that this will always report false inside the constructor of the component, so it needs to be checked later. For details, see Debugging Design-Time Controls.
Edit in response to comments and edit:
Unfortunately, the LicenseMananger, as well as most other services which provide information about whether you're in Design Time (including Component.DesignMode and DesignerProperties.IsInDesignMode) as specifically geared at handling user interface elements. This makes sense, as they're intended to tell you when your item is being "designed" on a designer surface, which requires the component to be registered in the designer.
There is no single property that will cleanly tell you this from within an arbitrary class.
I could see two options, both of which are less than ideal:
- Pass the required information into your class (ie: a
Component or DependencyObject), so the methods above can be used to check for design-time access correctly. This is probably a more maintainable approach, and will likely work properly in more situations.
- Resort to the "hack" of checking the current process name and looking for "devenv" - this is pretty awful, as it assumes Visual Studio only, relies on the executable name, etc... In general, I'll mention it because you'll find it with enough searching, but wouldn't recommend it, as it's very easy to circumvent and has many limitations and flaws.