Visual Studio Refactoring changes to many things - c#

Example: When i rename the following function
public void Foo(){}
to
public void Bar(){}
Then visual studio changes all constant strings, that contain the word "Foo" and replaces "Foo" with "Bar". Same goes for comments.
I NEVER want to replace values in strings with ctrl+r. And i only want to replace the references in the comments, if they are explicitly referenced with cref attribute.
It would be much appreciated if anyone could help me find the related setting in visual studio.
Thanks and kind regards.
I tried:
CTRL+R to refactor stuff.
...Comments changed
...Strings changed
...I expect only cref values and C# references to be updated.
I searched for "refactor" in Tools/Options and couldnt find the setting... But i might have overlooked something, because there are tons of options for that term...
I looked for other stackoverflows with that problem. Might have overlooked something there too.

There are checkboxes in the rename dialog, accessed by placing the caret on a variable and pressing Ctrl+R, Ctrl+R, that allow you to exclude comments and strings from automatic renaming operations.

Related

Can VS Intellisense be configured to run "to-cursor"?

I use both Delphi and Visual Studio (C#), and I've noticed a difference in how code-completion works which I find really annoying. In Delphi, if you edit existing code so that you change the variable you're using, code completion will give hints based on the code before your cursor. For instance, inserting an "I" into myString to become myIString would give a code hint to show any available variables starting with "myI". Selecting one will then overwrite myString with the new one.
In Visual Studio doing the same thing brings up a code-completion menu with all available variables, and none selected so you see the top of the list. You have to completely delete the variable you're using and start again before you get meaningful code completion.
I seem to make changes like this quite often (maybe I should just get it right in the first place!) so it gets a bit annoying having to remove code, and can be trickier on longer lines with lots of parts to them.
Here's some screenshots which (hopefully) illustrate the difference. I was struggling how best to word this!
Code completion in Delphi
Code completion in Visual Studio
I've tried playing with the Intellisense settings in Visual Studio and there's nothing there which seems to change the behaviour. Is there any way of replicating it in C#?
I've tried playing with the Intellisense settings in Visual Studio and
there's nothing there which seems to change the behaviour. Is there
any way of replicating it in C#?
For now, VS doesn't support for this behavior. The auto completion won't work when we insert a character into existing variable. It will take effect when we type a character in a empty place.
Type character in a new place, the intellisense works.
Insert character,the intellisense not works.
In my opinion your suggestions is really meaningful. I think it could be better if we have a new option to support for auto-completion when insert character, so I suggest you can Go=>Help=>Seed Feedback=>Provide a suggestion to post your idea there.
We who interested in it will vote for you if you share the link here.
As alternative ways:
You can go Tools=>Options=>Text Editor=>C#=>Intellisense=>Enable Show Completion list after a character is deleted option.
Then you can insert 'i', the statement could be myiSring1.GetType(); And delete any or all characters in the String1,it would show the intellisense like below:(e.g:I delete 'r'.) Apparently, this is what you really want, but as I mentioned above, VS itself doesn't support this behavior for now, hope you can use 'delete option' saves some time. Sorry for the inconvenience.
Also, you can check if ReSharper can meet your needs,since it's a third-party tool which seems to charge after xx-days trial, I have no further details for it.
Hope all above helps :)

How to remove a property from a custom user control

A property was added to a custom user control. Since then, Visual Studio has inserted generated code to every form that uses that user control. Now we want to remove that property because it is not going to be used. But obviously doing so causes compile errors. Is there a way to tell Visual Studio to remove the property from all that generated code? It seems to me that putting something like [Obsolete()] should be enough to tell Visual Studio to remove it from the generated code. Is there some other way?
Look at DesignerSerializationVisibilityAttribute, especially the DesignerSerializationVisibility.Hidden option.
Caveat: Unfortunately you will have to open every form/control in design mode so the code can be regenerated (if it does not do so already).
Regex to the rescue! What I usually do is open Replace in Files dialog (Ctrl+Shift+H), check Use Regular Expressions checkbox and replace instances of .+\.SomeProperty.+ with empty string.
Be sure to commit your changes to repository before this, so you can revert to working state if anything goes wrong.
You can try to use some refactoring tool, like Resharper.
http://www.jetbrains.com/resharper/
Adding the "Obsolete" atribute will only generate a compiler warning, but wont remove any code.
Just leave it and mark it as Obsolete.

Visual Studio auto opening collapsed properties

Here is my problem. I have a C# class file loaded in Visual Studio that I am working on. I made a class and created some properties inside of said class. I collapsed the properties like so:
I collapse the properties with the little +/- button on the side of each. I want to collapse each of them since I have a lot of other classes with properties and I don't want to see a lot of repetitive code (get, set).
Closing them works fine but after I work on some other classes in the same file the properties re-open so I can see the code:
This happens relatively often and is quite annoying. I have a lot of lines in the file and I sometimes have to work with a small screen. Is this a glitch/bug or something else? (I am using Visual Studio 2010 C# Express)
Thanks for your help.
There is no way to solve this so far, but this does the trick. Press CTRL-M and then O and it will auto collapse everything in the current file you are on.
An alternate tip to #DJKRAZE's excellent answer is Resharper. I use Resharper and it takes care of this automatically for me. For example if I write this code:
The 4 line property procedure causes a Expand/Collapse that is causing you grief.
Resharper makes it one line. When I delete the last curly brace (namespace) and enter it again, the code is automatically formatted (Edit > Advanced > Format Document doesn't do this):
You can use this:
#region some_name
//your variables or code whatever
#endregion
And then you can collapse the particular code, and the good thing it does not open like the way it happens in your case.
See if that worked.

Enum Intellisense Display Attribute?

I want to do this:
enum Foo
{
[Display="Item One"]
ItemOne,
}
So that Intellisense will display it like in the attribute instead of the actual name.
I know it's possible, I've seen it before.
Well you could provide XML documentation:
enum Foo
{
/// <summary>Item One</summary>
ItemOne
}
I'm not sure whether that's quite what you were thinking of, but here's an example of what it looks like in VS 2010:
Note that I'm assuming you mean from the code editor... if you mean within a property editor, that could be something entirely different, e.g. DisplayNameAttribute (although that's meant for properties, events or methods).
If you know an example of what you want within the framework, we may be able to help more.
As a note... if you are building a .dll that is to be referenced by another application, just writing a summary will not allow the text to show up in intellisense for the referencing application. To accomplish this, you must deploy the XML documentation file as well, which requires a re-compiled version of the same .dll.
To do this (in VS2008 anyways), go into the Properties of your project, click the Build tab, click the checkbox at the bottom next to 'XML documentation file:', rebuild the application, and now you have the files needed to make it work.

Remove the automatic #region/#endregion tags when implementing an interface in Visual Studio 2005/2008

When user the "Implement Inteface X" context menu feature, the inserted code gets surrounded by a
#region [interfacename] Members
#endregion
pair. I always end up deleting this, is there a way I can permanently turn it off? I had a quick search through the snippets directory, but wasn't sure if this was the right place. There's pp_region.snippet that I guess I could modify, but I got the feeling that would turn off the #region/#endregion completely. I thought I'd ask here before I go doing things that will have me re-installing VS...
You can turn it off via Tools / Options
Then, in the option-window, you select 'Text Editor', then the language of your choice (C# for ex).
Then, you select 'Advanced', and then, you have a checkbox which says:
'Surround generated code with #region'
Also, if you're using Resharper you can fully configure the layout of your classes so they'll look exactly the way you want. One of the options is to completely remove the region tags whenever it finds any. It's awesome to open any c# project and have it reformatted just by doing [CTRL+E, C]

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