Well, there is a kind of native solution, I found for .NET Core 2.2
The idea is to use <include>
tag.
You can add <GenerateDocumentationFile>true</GenerateDocumentationFile>
your .csproj
a file.
You might have an interface:
namespace YourNamespace
{
/// <summary>
/// Represents interface for a type.
/// </summary>
public interface IType
{
/// <summary>
/// Executes an action in read access mode.
/// </summary>
void ExecuteAction();
}
}
And something that inherits from it:
using System;
namespace YourNamespace
{
/// <summary>
/// A type inherited from <see cref="IType"/> interface.
/// </summary>
public class InheritedType : IType
{
/// <include file='bin\Release\netstandard2.0\YourNamespace.xml' path='doc/members/member[@name="M:YourNamespace.IType.ExecuteAction()"]/*'/>
public void ExecuteAction() => Console.WriteLine("Action is executed.");
}
}
Ok, it is a bit scary, but it does add the expected elements to the YourNamespace.xml
.
If you build Debug
configuration, you can swap Release
for Debug
in the file
attribute of include
tag.
To find a correct member
's name
to reference just open generated Documentation.xml
file.
I also assume that this approach requires a project or solution to be build at least twice (first time to create an initial XML file, and the second time to copy elements from it to itself).
The bright side is that Visual Studio validates copied elements, so it is much easier to keep documentation and code in sync with interface/base class, etc (for example names of arguments, names of type parameters, etc).
At my project, I have ended up with both <inheritdoc/>
(for DocFX) and <include/>
(For publishing NuGet packages and for validation at Visual Studio):
/// <inheritdoc />
/// <include file='bin\Release\netstandard2.0\Platform.Threading.xml' path='doc/members/member[@name="M:Platform.Threading.Synchronization.ISynchronization.ExecuteReadOperation(System.Action)"]/*'/>
public void ExecuteReadOperation(Action action) => action();