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I use FindFirstFile() and FindNextFile() to list files of a directory. When I call FindFirstFile(), I have to give a search path to it. It returns a handle that can be used by FindNextFile(). Is there a WinAPI function that can get the previously given path by the handle?

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  • 4
    Not to my knowledge. But, you gave it the path initially, can you not just keep it for later use. Nov 29, 2022 at 12:41
  • 1
    It's a combination of path and/or filename with or without wildcards you provide, not just a pure path.
    – AmigoJack
    Nov 29, 2022 at 14:56
  • @AmigoJack Yes, but I need that one. I need the path/filename plus wildcards that I gave initially to the FindFirstFile function. Nov 29, 2022 at 16:00
  • 2
    No, that's not possible. But since this sounds like an XY problem you could define that function yourself, so all of your code calls that, which then calls the real FindFirstFile() but also stores the filename you provided, so you can access it later.
    – AmigoJack
    Nov 29, 2022 at 18:20
  • @AmigoJack For certain causes I still need this solution. I've found a Win API call named GetFinalPathNameByHandleW which can return the filename of an opened file by a handle. I need something like that for FindFirstFile/FindNextFile. Nov 30, 2022 at 19:22

1 Answer 1

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Just store that information like you store the search handle already: in a variable. Then create your own wrapper functions for both FindFirstFileA() and FindNextFileA():

type
  // What you want to give back per file system object
  TMyFindInfo= record  // Whatever you want to do here on your own
    wfd: Windows.WIN32_FIND_DATAA;  // Just provide this as-is because it already everything
  end;

  // Not only storing the handle, but also other details
  TMyFindHandle= record
    h: THandle;  // Search resource
    sFilter: String;  // Original query
    iMatches,  // How often did the search yield a file system object?
    iError: Cardinal;  // Which error has occured? 0=ERROR_SUCCESS.
  end;

function MyFindFile1st
( const sFilter: String
; out vInfo: TMyFindInfo
): TMyFindHandle;
begin
  result.sFilter:= sFilter;
  result.h:= Windows.FindFirstFileA( PChar(sFilter), vInfo.wfd );
  if result.h= INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE then begin
    result.iError:= Windows.GetLastError();
    case result.iError of
      ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND: ;  // The only error we don't need to display
    else  // Most likely ERROR_PATH_NOT_FOUND
      Windows.MessageBoxA
      ( Form1.Handle
      , PChar('Error initializing search "'+ result.sFilter
        + '": 0x'+ IntToHex( result.iError, 8 ))  // Get text message elsewhere
      , PChar('Error')
      , MB_ICONSTOP
      );
    end;

    result.iMatches:= 0;
    ZeroMemory( @vInfo, SizeOf( vInfo ) );  // Nothing to see here
  end else begin
    result.iError:= ERROR_SUCCESS;
    result.iMatches:= 1;
  end;
end;

function MyFindFile2nd
( var vHandle: TMyFindHandle
; out vInfo: TMyFindInfo
): Boolean;
begin
  result:= Windows.FindNextFileA( vHandle.h, vInfo.wfd );
  if not result then begin
    vHandle.iError:= Windows.GetLastError();
    case vHandle.iError of
      ERROR_SUCCESS,  // The only errors we don't need to display
      ERROR_NO_MORE_FILES: ;
    else
      Windows.MessageBoxA
      ( Form1.Handle
      , PChar('Error during search "'+ vHandle.sFilter  // Original filter from 1st call
        + '" after '+ IntToStr( vHandle.iMatches )+ ' elements occured: 0x'
        + IntToHex( vHandle.iError, 8 ))
      , PChar('Error')
      , MB_ICONSTOP
      );
    end;
    Windows.ZeroMemory( @vInfo, SizeOf( vInfo ) );  // Nothing to see here

    if not Windows.FindClose( vHandle.h ) then begin  // Release resource
      vHandle.iError:= Windows.GetLastError();
      case vHandle.iError of
        ERROR_SUCCESS: ;
      else  // Yes, this can fail, too
        Windows.MessageBoxA
        ( Form1.Handle
        , PChar('Error finalizing search "'+ vHandle.sFilter  // Original filter from 1st call
          + '" after '+ IntToStr( vHandle.iMatches )+ ' elements occured: 0x'
          + IntToHex( vHandle.iError, 8 ))
        , PChar('Error')
        , MB_ICONSTOP
        );
      end;
    end;
  end else Inc( vHandle.iMatches );  // One more match
end;


// Now the example on how to use it
procedure TForm1.Button1Click(Sender: TObject);
var
  vHandle: TMyFindHandle;
  vInfo: TMyFindInfo;
begin
  vHandle:= MyFindFile1st( 'C:\Windows\*.exe', vInfo );
  while vHandle.iError= ERROR_SUCCESS do begin
    Memo1.Lines.Add( vInfo.wfd.cFileName );
    MyFindFile2nd( vHandle, vInfo );  // Don't even need the Boolean result here
  end;
  Memo1.Lines.Add( '= '+ IntToStr( vHandle.iMatches )+ ' FS objects' );  // Not only files
end;

At no time there is a need to re-request a detail by handle, because you can keep that detail right with the handle that you need to take care of anyway. Just put both together into a record and pass that to your own functions.

My code is for demonstration purposes (although I think it's a rather trivial overall case). I discourage from displaying dialog windows right in those functions, but instead react upon what vHandle.iError contains where I called those functions.

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