CA2232: Mark Windows Forms entry points with STAThread
TypeName |
MarkWindowsFormsEntryPointsWithStaThread |
CheckId |
CA2232 |
Category |
Microsoft.Usage |
Breaking Change |
Non Breaking |
Cause
An assembly references the System.Windows.Forms namespace, and its entry point is not marked with the System.STAThreadAttribute attribute.
Rule Description
STAThreadAttribute indicates that the COM threading model for the application is single-threaded apartment. This attribute must be present on the entry point of any application that uses Windows Forms; if it is omitted, the Windows components might not work correctly. If the attribute is not present, the application uses the multithreaded apartment model, which is not supported for Windows Forms.
Note
Visual Basic projects that use the Application Framework do not have to mark the Main method with STAThread. The Visual Basic compiler does it automatically.
How to Fix Violations
To fix a violation of this rule, add the STAThreadAttribute attribute to the entry point. If the System.MTAThreadAttribute attribute is present, remove it.
When to Suppress Warnings
It is safe to suppress a warning from this rule if you are developing for the .NET Compact Framework, for which the STAThreadAttribute attribute is unnecessary and not supported.
Example
The following examples demonstrate the correct usage of STAThreadAttribute.
Imports System
Imports System.Windows.Forms
NameSpace UsageLibrary
Public Class MyForm
Inherits Form
Public Sub New()
Me.Text = "Hello World!"
End Sub 'New
' Satisfies rule: MarkWindowsFormsEntryPointsWithStaThread.
<STAThread()> _
Public Shared Sub Main()
Dim aform As New MyForm()
Application.Run(aform)
End Sub
End Class
End Namespace
using System;
using System.Windows.Forms;
namespace UsageLibrary
{
public class MyForm: Form
{
public MyForm()
{
this.Text = "Hello World!";
}
// Satisfies rule: MarkWindowsFormsEntryPointsWithStaThread.
[STAThread]
public static void Main()
{
MyForm aform = new MyForm();
Application.Run(aform);
}
}
}