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How To Use ForceDirectories Method To Create Folders In C++

How To Use ForceDirectories Method To Create Folders In C++

ForceDirectories Method (System:SysUtils:ForceDirectories) is a SysUtils Method listed in Disk And Directory Support Routines that creates a new directory, including the creation of parent directories as needed. ForceDirectories creates a new directory as specified in Dir, which must be a fully-qualified pathname. If the directories given in the path do not yet exist, ForceDirectories attempts to create them.

In this post, you’ll learn how to use Force Directories Method, Syntax of ForceDirectories to create folders in c++ and its examples. By learning Force Directories Methods. it will help you to easily build C++ applications using the C++ IDE.

Here is the Syntax of ForceDirectories Method in C++ Builder

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ForceDirectories returns True if it successfully creates all necessary directories, False if it could not create a needed directory.

Note that, do not call ForceDirectories with an empty string. Doing so causes ForceDirectories to raise an exception. The Vcl.FileCtrl unit (Windows only) contains a ForceDirectories function that is deprecated. System.SysUtils.ForceDirectories is preferred, and can be used in multi-device applications.

Here is a simple example of using the ForceDirectories() Method in C++

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A full examples of how to create folders with the C++ ForceDirectories Method

Here is the full simple example to ForceDirectories() method,

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This example above will create “MyFolder”, “MySubFolder” and “MyOtherSubFolder” directories together.

Here’s another example showing how to create folders or directories in C++

Here we used different creating directory methods in a single C++ Builder example which shows how it is flexible to use different methods,

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C++ Builder is the easiest and fastest C and C++ IDE for building simple or professional applications on the Windows, MacOS, iOS & Android operating systems. It is also easy for beginners to learn with its wide range of samples, tutorials, help files, and LSP support for code. RAD Studio’s C++ Builder version comes with the award-winning VCL framework for high-performance native Windows apps and the powerful FireMonkey (FMX) framework for cross-platform UIs.

There is a free C++ Builder Community Edition for students, beginners, and startups; it can be downloaded from here. For professional developers, there are Professional, Architect, or Enterprise versions of C++ Builder and there is a trial version you can download from here.

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