Directory.EnumerateFileSystemEntries Method (String)
Returns an enumerable collection of file-system entries in a specified path.
Namespace: System.IO
Assembly: mscorlib (in mscorlib.dll)
Parameters
- path
- Type: System.String
The directory to search.
Return Value
Type: System.Collections.Generic.IEnumerable<String>An enumerable collection of file-system entries in the directory specified by path.
| Exception | Condition |
|---|---|
| ArgumentException | path is a zero-length string, contains only white space, or contains invalid characters as defined by GetInvalidPathChars. |
| ArgumentNullException | path is null. |
| DirectoryNotFoundException | path is invalid, such as referring to an unmapped drive. |
| IOException | path is a file name. |
| PathTooLongException | The specified path, file name, or combined exceed the system-defined maximum length. For example, on Windows-based platforms, paths must be less than 248 characters and file names must be less than 260 characters. |
| SecurityException | The caller does not have the required permission. |
| UnauthorizedAccessException | The caller does not have the required permission. |
You can specify relative path information with the path parameter. Relative path information is interpreted as relative to the current working directory, which you can determine by using the GetCurrentDirectory method.
The EnumerateFileSystemEntries and GetFileSystemEntries methods differ as follows: When you use EnumerateFileSystemEntries, you can start enumerating the collection of entries before the whole collection is returned; when you use GetFileSystemEntries, you must wait for the whole array of entries to be returned before you can access the array. Therefore, when you are working with many files and directories, EnumerateFiles can be more efficient.
The returned collection is not cached; each call to the GetEnumerator on the collection will start a new enumeration.
Windows 8, Windows Server 2012, Windows 7, Windows Vista SP2, Windows Server 2008 (Server Core Role not supported), Windows Server 2008 R2 (Server Core Role supported with SP1 or later; Itanium not supported)
The .NET Framework does not support all versions of every platform. For a list of the supported versions, see .NET Framework System Requirements.