$EXEICON: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Code and command by Fellippe Heitor
Navigation:
Main Page with Articles and Tutorials
Keyword Reference - Alphabetical
Keyword Reference - By usage
Report a broken link
No edit summary Tag: Manual revert |
No edit summary |
||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
* Calling [[_ICON]] without an {{Parameter|imageHandle&}} uses the embeded icon, if available. | * Calling [[_ICON]] without an {{Parameter|imageHandle&}} uses the embeded icon, if available. | ||
** Starting with '''build 20170906/64''', the window will automatically use the icon embedded by [[$EXEICON]], without having to call _ICON. | ** Starting with '''build 20170906/64''', the window will automatically use the icon embedded by [[$EXEICON]], without having to call _ICON. | ||
* '''[[Keywords currently not supported by QB64# | * '''[[Keywords currently not supported by QB64#Keywords_not_supported_in_Linux_or_macOS_versions|Keyword not supported in Linux or macOS versions]]''' | ||
Revision as of 01:36, 24 January 2023
$EXEICON pre-compiler metacommand embeds a designated icon file into the compiled EXE file to be viewed in Windows Explorer.
Syntax
- $EXEICON:iconfile.ico
Parameters
- iconfile.ico is a valid ICO file
Description
- Calling _ICON without an imageHandle& uses the embeded icon, if available.
- Starting with build 20170906/64, the window will automatically use the icon embedded by $EXEICON, without having to call _ICON.
- Keyword not supported in Linux or macOS versions
Examples
Example: Embeds a designated icon file into the compiled EXE which can be viewed in Windows Explorer folders.
$EXEICON:'mush.ico' _ICON |
See also