In C in Windows, how do I open a website using the default browser? In Mac OS X, I do system("open http://url");
3 Answers
You have to use ShellExecute()
.
The C code to do that is as simple as:
ShellExecute(NULL, "open", "http://url", NULL, NULL, SW_SHOWNORMAL);
This was documented by Microsoft Knowledge Base article KB 224816, but unfortunately the article has been retired and there's no archived version of it.
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1An archived version is available at betaarchive.com/wiki/index.php/Microsoft_KB_Archive/224816– Robyt3Sep 1, 2021 at 18:35
To open a URL in your default browser you could use shell commands and system()
like this:
#include <stdlib.h>
int main(void)
{
system("open https://example.com");
}
open
is the default command to open stuff on MacOS, but what happens when you want to open a URL on Windows, Linux, or another operating system?
Well, you will need to change that open
command.
On Linux
xdg-open <link>
On Windows
start <link>
On MacOS
open <link>
But there is good news, you don't need to handle that, I already created a module/package/library and you can install it using CLIB. It is cross-platform, already handle the operating systems stuff, and it is super easy to include it on your project.
Installation
$ clib install abranhe/opener.c
Usage
#include "opener.h"
int main(void)
{
opener("https://example.com");
return 0;
}
Since it is written using the shell commands, you are also able to open local directories.
// Open current directory
opener(".");
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Suggestion: use a different identifier (
open
has a POSIX meaning), make the argumentconst
and maybe return something to indicate success/failure:int abranhe_open(const char *url);
– pmgJan 23, 2019 at 19:29 -
@pmg thanks for your fast feedback, I'll work on it,
int opening(...)
orint opn(...)
would be great– AbrahamJan 23, 2019 at 19:35 -
Thanks for this nugget, in my case the answer by lornova didn't work unless I specified the application's path/exe name– jsonVDec 7, 2019 at 11:13
In Windows, you can use start http://url
on the command line to open an URL in the default browser. However, this seems to be specific to the command prompt and is not a real executable, so I don't think you can start it from your C/C++ program.
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system("cmd /c start http://stackoverflow.com/");
no need to#include <windows.h>
when using system(),/c
is for "Run command and then terminate"– netcatOct 3, 2016 at 20:47 -
1
system("cmd /c start \"\" \"URL\")
so it can handle special chars like &– netcatOct 5, 2016 at 12:50 -
Hi netcat, I think you have a typo or two there. Surely:
system( "cmd /c start \"URL\"" )
May 26, 2019 at 15:31 -
@SwissFrank, no, @netcat is correct. When passing a speech-mark enclosed argument to
start
, the first argument must be a speech-mark enclosed title for the command window. Feb 17, 2020 at 16:30 -
Windows 10 now supports opening a URL without having to pass it through
cmd
. i.e.system("start \"\" \"http://example.com/page?url=with¶meters#and_anchor\"");
works for me. Feb 17, 2020 at 16:34