问题
I'm sure most Windows developers are familiar with this error message, usually when trying to mix 32- and 64-bit executables. In particular Python and Java can both get it.
%1 is not a valid Win32 application.
It's clear that %1
represents the first argument to the failing command - i.e. the executable that is trying to be loaded - but why does it not get filled in with the actual path?
Is it something that the caller is doing wrong, or is it a basic failing of some Windows subsystem that cannot be fixed for compatibility reasons?
回答1:
The error message comes from Windows itself, you can see the complete list at System Error Codes (0-499). You translate an error code returned by the API into a message using FormatMessage, which has an optional Arguments
array; any %1
in the message will be replaced by the first element in this array. If nothing is passed for the arguments, the %1
will be left unchanged if the FORMAT_MESSAGE_IGNORE_INSERTS
flag was used or the FormatMessage
will fail if it wasn't (thanks to IInspectable for that information).
As an example of how this might get missed, consider code where an error code gets converted immediately to an exception. If the exception contains the error code but nothing else, then there is no context for knowing what to pass to FormatMessage
.
回答2:
The caller is doing everything right. They are calling FormatMessage, passing along the FORMAT_MESSAGE_IGNORE_INSERTS
flag1), like everyone should. The caller is not in control of the message that gets created, and has no way of knowing, that it should pass additional arguments, what types they should be or how many.
This was an early design bug in the Windows error reporting system, and you'll see those placeholders in every well-behaved application.
1)See The importance of the FORMAT_MESSAGE_IGNORE_INSERTS flag.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/43615129/why-is-1-rarely-substituted-in-1-is-not-a-valid-win32-application