Problem passing a directory with a space in it as an argument
-
Thanks for that.
Now, I have this:
@ QString dir = QFileDialog::getExistingDirectory(this, tr("Open Directory"),
"/home",
QFileDialog::ShowDirsOnly
| QFileDialog::DontResolveSymlinks);
QString r;
r = dir.replace("/", "\");QStringList arguments;
arguments << "/NOSTART" << "/PF""""+r+"\*.pub"""";
QProcess *myProcess = new QProcess(qApp);
myProcess->start(program, arguments);@
... and PDF Creator gives me this:
bq. The file can not be found!
""\“C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf*.pub\”""Any more help would be greatly appreciated. Alternatively, do you know another simple way to do this? All I want to do is select a directory and pass that directory as part of an argument to PDF Creator. That seems simple, and I thought this 'project' would be easy to do. If there's another simple way to do this, I'd love to hear it.
Thanks.
-
I'm not able to test at the moment, but what do you get if you write:
@
myProcess->start("C:\Program Files\PDFCreator\PDFCreator.exe /NOSTART /PF"""C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf*.pub"""");
@As a last resort, you could also try...
@
system("C:\Program Files\PDFCreator\PDFCreator.exe /NOSTART /PF"C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf*.pub"");
@
...but the general consensus is to avoid system() if at all possible because it can be a security risk. system() might also upset your antivirus. -
JKSH,
With this:
@ myProcess->start("C:\Program Files (x86)\PDFCreator\PDFCreator.exe /NOSTART /PF"""C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf\*.pub"""");@I get nothing.
With this:
@system("C:\Program Files (x86)\PDFCreator\PDFCreator.exe /NOSTART /PF"C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf\*.pub"");@I get this:
@'C:\Program' は、内部コマンドまたは外部コマンド、
操作可能なプログラムまたはバッチ ファイルとして認識されていません。
@... which means it's no good (my OS is Japanese).
I tried playing around with your ideas - escaping quotes and stuff, but I got nowhere.
Thanks for the interest and any further help.
-
Oops, you need to wrap the path to PDFCreator.exe in quotes too, because there are spaces in the "Program Files" part.
Try these:
@
myProcess->start(""""C:\Program Files\PDFCreator\PDFCreator.exe""" /NOSTART /PF"""C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf*.pub"""");
@@
system(""C:\Program Files\PDFCreator\PDFCreator.exe" /NOSTART /PF"C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf*.pub"");
@ -
Hello again.
@ myProcess->start(""""C:\Program Files (x86)\PDFCreator\PDFCreator.exe""" /NOSTART /PF"""C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf*.pub"""");
@This gave me an error (unknown escape sequence '*'), so I added an extra backslash there and then I just got nothing.
@system(""C:\Program Files (x86)\PDFCreator\PDFCreator.exe" /NOSTART /PF"C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf\*.pub"");@
This gave me the same error as above (the Japanese one).
-
Huh, it looks like system() is broken on Windows.
@
// This works
system(""C:\Program Files\7-zip\7z.exe" a -tzip C:\Test\output.zip C:\Test\*.txt");
@@
// This gives me:
// 'C:\Program' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
// operable program or batch file.
system(""C:\Program Files\7-zip\7z.exe" a -tzip "C:\Test\output.zip" C:\Test\*.txt");
@@
// This works, surprisingly!
QProcess p;
p.start(""C:\Program Files\7-zip\7z.exe" a -tzip "C:\Test\output.zip" C:\Test\*.txt");
@So, perhaps you should try this?:
@
myProcess->start(""C:\Program Files (x86)\PDFCreator\PDFCreator.exe" /NOSTART /PF"C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf\*.pub"");
@(P.S. This is with Qt 5.3.0 beta. I don't know what it's like on Qt 4.7)
-
I'm out of ideas, I'm afraid.
Try subscribing to the "Interest mailing list":http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest and asking there. Someone had a similar problem not long ago, which was resolved on that list: http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lib.qt.user/11719
-
Hi, just tested, when I changed your lines:
@ QStringList arguments;
arguments << "/NOSTART" << "/PF"+r+"\*.pub";@to
@ QStringList arguments;
QString sQuote = """;
arguments << "/NOSTART" << "/PF"+ sQuote + r + "\*.pub" + sQuote;
@I got a PDF file (but my system is English). Anyway I think it should work, just a matter of fixing those d*mn quotes..
-
hskoglund,
Thanks for trying, but with that, with a directory that worked before, I get this from PDFCreator:
bq. The file can not be found!
\“C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf*.pub\”I don't know if the language of the system is relevant, but interestingly, I often find in things like this, where you would normally see a '', I Windows shows a yen sign. I'm not sure why that is or if it means the code is treated any differently (maybe I should look this up) but I don't usually have a problem with it - I type a blackslash and I see a backslash in my code and it escapes things and whatever it needs to do, but the little message windows that give errors like the one I've shown above actually show yen signs. This is not specific to what I'm doing here - it often happens, and it's never been a problem - I just see it as a quirk of the Japanese OS.
[edit]
Here's something related to the backslash/yen thing: http://www.pcreview.co.uk/forums/japanese-fonts-changing-backslash-yen-symbol-t452657.html
[/edit] -
[quote author="BonRouge" date="1397489044"]Hello again.
@ myProcess->start(""""C:\Program Files (x86)\PDFCreator\PDFCreator.exe""" /NOSTART /PF"""C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf*.pub"""");
@This gave me an error (unknown escape sequence '*'), so I added an extra backslash there and then I just got nothing.
@system(""C:\Program Files (x86)\PDFCreator\PDFCreator.exe" /NOSTART /PF"C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf\*.pub"");@
This gave me the same error as above (the Japanese one).
[/quote]I really know nothing about how the Qt Process object works as I am new to Qt. However, the system option is formatted incorrectly. You must have a space between /PF and "C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf\*.pub""
It should read:
@system(""C:\Program Files (x86)\PDFCreator\PDFCreator.exe" /NOSTART /PF "C:\Users\Steve\Documents\arf\*.pub"");@ -
prImem0ver,
Thanks for the input, but this is from "the PDF Creator site":http://www.pdfforge.org/content/command-line-parameters:
/PF<filename>
Print a file with the standard program linking with the extension of the file. In general, this option is useful in connection with Auto-Save mode. It is not possible to use this parameter in conjunction with the /OF parameter. There is NO space between the parameter and the file name.(The emphasis is on the site, not added by me.)
-
You will not be able to use quotes then. At least not around that directory. Try it without the quotes since there is no space there.
-
nevermind i was wrong about that anyway. apparently quotes in the middle of a text block is still interpreted as one argument even if spaces exist.
-
Hi everyone. Bad news and good news... The bad news is that I've given up trying to do this with Qt because it's driving me crazy. The good news is that someone's already done this in VBScript. :)
-
Hi again, couldn't resist another attempt at this problem :-)
first: about those yen signs, it's because of the japanese codepage used by windows (where \ is replaced by the yen sign)
then: I reread your problem description, and it's not about backslashes or yen signs but spaces in directories/paths. And as you say, invoking PDF Creator from the command line. in that case when you quote the path a space works fine and dandy. But not from Qt :-(
So I thought, why not go lowtech on this problem and launch PDF Creator using a .cmd file (for 64-bit Win7 it's better to use .cmd instead of .bat files).
I tested with a cmd file (C:\Temp\StartPF.cmd) that contains two lines:
@"C:\Program Files (x86)\PDFCreator\PDFCreator.exe" /NOSTART /PF"%1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9
"C:\Program Files\PDFCreator\PDFCreator.exe" /NOSTART /PF"%1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9@(One of the two lines should work regardless if you're on 32 bit or 64 bits Win7.)
Then I modified your program again:
@ program = "cmd.exe";QStringList arguments; arguments << "/c C:\\temp\\StartPF.cmd " + r + "\\*.pub";@
Note in the .cmd file there's no trailing quote, it's because QProcess inserts quotes anyway around each separate argument. (Also note I add everything together into just one argument in the string list, to minimize the extra cooking by QProcess.)
Anyway, the low-tech idea here is to use that sequence of %1 %2 %3 etc. to bake paths together to it's full glory again even with spaces inside. As long as the # of different spaces are 8 or less :-)
-
hskoglund,
You're a star! It works perfectly. :-)
Now, can you tell me what you did there? You said you've gone low-tech there, but unfortunately, I've only ever cobbled together some simple .bat files in the past and I've never even used a .cmd file before.
Thanks a lot. :-)
-
Good! (when I saw you posted couple of seconds before me, I hoped my post would save you from the brink of insanity.)
About .bat/.cmd files, that's one advantage of being old age, they're primitive tools for sure but not unknown territory. Anyway a .cmd file is nothing more than a renamed .bat file, because sometimes .bat files don't start in 64-bit Windows, but .cmd works fine.
The low-tech? It's just that sequence %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 ... that works as a "catch-all", i.e. when QProcess launches the .cmd file, an argument with spaces inside gets split up into separate arguments, but %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 ... just pastes them together again.