I been doing wood-frame residential wiring for years, but now I want to do a little rewiring in a newly-constructed condo with metal stud walls, which appears to be built to commercial codes.
Despite otherwise good design, it has one of those wall switches that controls half of a duplex receptacle. I hate those things -- it's gotta go. What I've got is a metal box with a neutral, a hot, and a (now capped off) switched hot.
I want to run a length of romex behind the wall, from the box near the floor directly upward to a spot as close to the ceiling as I can reach, where I would bring the cable back outside the wall & mount a flush box for a permanent fixture.
There's no ground wire -- evidently the box is grounded through the structure? Or through ground wires connecting the boxes? This is really uncharted territory for me. I don't even know whether or not the receptacle and switch boxes are adjacent to studs, as they invariably are with wood framing?

I have much experience with the Wiremold (surface mount) system but the, um, architectural committee has vetoed that approach. (Mrs. Professor thinks it would look tacky here, and I tend to agree. I'll probably have to re-think the proposed tool pegboard for the living room, too.

)
Anyhow, is it possible to run a cable (containing the switched hot, along with neutral & gnd) out of the metal receptable box and up the wall? Is it safe? I'm a little worried about untethered cable possibly ending up just behind the drywall in places. Murphy's Law says that's the exact spot where I'll decide to drive a screw later.
