I'm writing a program which creates no forms at all until one is required. The problem is, it's preventing shutdown from continuing automatically. I've seen discussions about adding an if
to form closing events to check if it's due to shutdown, but as I've said, my program is meant to have no forms at all until required.
Is there any event or some other method that will allow me to know when my program should be closing itself to allow for Windows to shut itse开发者_C百科lf down automatically? And it's not multithreaded.
You can use the SystemEvents
class, to "listen to" users logging out, or shutting down.
If I understand the documentation correctly (and a deep study with Reflector confirms this):
- The systemevents will spawn a new thread that receives the messages from windows (it has its own messagepump).
- When an event is received, your code will be called, from the new thread. You should be aware of this.
You could always add a dummy form which you open minimized, with no icon on the taskbar - it won't have any visual impact, but will be sent the form closing event - where you could note the shutdown event, and presumably shut down/stop whatever else there is that your application is doing.
Handling the Microsoft.Win32.SystemEvents.SessionEnding
event, and checking if it's an actual shutdown with System.Environment.HasShutdownStarted
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