No, according to the source code:
// Tests whether a file exists. The result is true if the file
// given by the specified path exists; otherwise, the result is
// false. Note that if path describes a directory,
// Exists will return true.
public static bool Exists(string path)
{
try
{
if (path == null)
return false;
if (path.Length == 0)
return false;
path = Path.GetFullPath(path);
// After normalizing, check whether path ends in directory separator.
// Otherwise, FillAttributeInfo removes it and we may return a false positive.
// GetFullPath should never return null
Debug.Assert(path != null, "File.Exists: GetFullPath returned null");
if (path.Length > 0 && PathInternal.IsDirectorySeparator(path[path.Length - 1]))
{
return false;
}
return FileSystem.FileExists(path);
}
catch (ArgumentException) { }
catch (IOException) { }
catch (UnauthorizedAccessException) { }
return false;
}
There isn't seem to be any case the it should throw an Exception unless FileSystem.FileExists
throws some exception I don't know about.
EDIT: Since I cannot find out source code of FileSystem.FileExists
, I checked the .NET Framework source code instead, it's a bit different at the internal call:
// Determine whether path describes an existing directory
// on disk, avoiding security checks.
[System.Security.SecurityCritical] // auto-generated
[ResourceExposure(ResourceScope.Machine)]
[ResourceConsumption(ResourceScope.Machine)]
internal static bool InternalExists(String path, out int lastError) {
Win32Native.WIN32_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DATA data = new Win32Native.WIN32_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DATA();
lastError = File.FillAttributeInfo(path, ref data, false, true);
return (lastError == 0) && (data.fileAttributes != -1)
&& ((data.fileAttributes & Win32Native.FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) != 0);
}
It in turn calls FillAttributeInfo
(the code is a bit long so I don't paste it here), I think it only throws IOException
(at line 1402 __Error.WinIOError();
)