UriFormatException : Invalid URI: Invalid port specified
The assembly qualified string used as a parameter below for a Uri works in XAML, but gives me the error shown when used in code.
I tried every kind of UriKind with the same result. How can I fix this?
[Test]
public void LargeImageSource_IsKnown()
{
var uri = new Uri(
"pack://application:,,,/" +
"MyAssembly.Core.Presentation.Wpf;component/" +
"Images/Delete.png", UriKind.RelativeOrAbsolute);
Assert.That(
_pickerActivityCollectionVm.DeleteActivityCommand.LargeImageSource,
Is.EqualTo(uri));
}
System.UriFormatException : Invalid URI: Invalid port specified.
at System.Uri.CreateThis(String uri, Boolean dontEscape, UriKind uriKind)
at System.Uri..ctor(String uriString, UriKind uriKind)
UPDATE
Based on Thomas' superb answer and my own comments about readability, I wound up using the following in my BaseTestFixture class. Hope this helps someone else.
protected virtual void OnFixtureSetUp() {
// logging, other one time setup stuff...
const string scheme = "pack";
if (!UriParser.IsKnownScheme(scheme)) {
Assert.That(PackUriHelper.UriSchemePack, Is.EqualTo(scheme));
}
}
That's because you're executing this code while the pack://
scheme is not yet registered. This scheme is registered when you create the Application
object. You can add this code in the setup of your test fixture:
[SetUp]
public void Setup()
{
if (!UriParser.IsKnownScheme("pack"))
new System.Windows.Application();
}
EDIT: actually it seems the pack://
scheme is registered in the type initializer of the PackUriHelper
class (which happens to be used by the Application
class). So actually you don't need to create an instance of Application
, you only need to access a static member of PackUriHelper
to ensure the type initializer has run:
[SetUp]
public void Setup()
{
string s = System.IO.Packaging.PackUriHelper.UriSchemePack;
}
It appears that accessing PackUriHelper.UriSchemePack
only registers the pack
scheme, not the application
scheme, which I needed to use the pack://application:,,,/
syntax in my unit tests. I therefore had to use the new Application()
approach, which worked fine for registering both schemes.
If you're seeing this error in a Windows Store / WinRT project:
I wasn't able to use the "pack://" syntax at all when trying to load a resource in my C# app. What worked was ms-appx:// syntax of this kind:
ms-appx://[project folder]/[resource path]
For example, I wanted to load a resource dictionary named "styles.xaml" from a folder "core". This URI ended up working for me:
dictionary.Source = new System.Uri("ms-appx:///core/styles.xaml");
Even though the question specified WPF, the problem seemed extremely similar but ended up having a completely different solution, which took a while to find, and existing answers didn't help at all.
Again, this solution does not apply to WPF