Yes, I did, and I still get the error. Strange thing is that if I write the command to a batch file, the run the batch file from within my code, it works fine.
Try this
static void Main(string[] args)
{
string sMSWord = @"C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office10\winword.exe";
string sDocument = @"C:\mydocs\some.doc";
string sCommand = sMSWord + " " + sDocument;
System.Diagnostics.Process.Start(sCommand);
}
>>I was just playing around, and I tried this:
>>
>>
>>string sCommand = @"C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1_6_10\bin\javac c:\myjava\Test.java";
>>System.Diagnostics.Process.Start(sCommand);
>>
>>
>>And I get "The system cannot find the specified file"
>>
>>If I leave off the "c:\myjava\Test.java", then the java compiler options are displayed, so that's not the part it can't find. I have verified that the .java file is there.
>>
>>I created a batch file with this in it:
>>
>>"C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1_6_10\bin\javac" "c:\myjava\Test.java"
>>
>>
>>I ran it and it compiled the file fine.
>>
>>I'm guessing it has something to do with the space in the file paths.
>>
>>Anyone know what's wrong?
>
>Did you try to put the file name in single quotes?
Everything makes sense in someone's mind
public class SystemCrasher :ICrashable
In addition, an integer field is not for irrational people