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What's the best way to manage the physical layout of a Visual Studio project on disk? I'm getting to the point where I have several folders but I can't really continue categorizing the way I am now. For example, I have several custom controls, but sometimes those controls have to do with application settings, so do they go into the Controls folder or Application Settings folder? I have many full-fledged forms that reside in the main source folder so that it's getting a bit daunting looking for the right source file.

Are there any tips anyone can offer on how they organize their medium-sized projects into folder hierarchies so they don't go insane trying to locate something in the project?

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I typically organize my folders based on my namespaces. For example, classed in the namespace "Company.Project.DataAccess" would be stored in company/project/dataAccess directory.

I admit that this is still slightly painful to manage opening files. However, Resharper's "Go to type" feature has eliminated all of my searching in Solution Explorer.

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Ah, so in my case I could simplify things by implementing a "User Interface\Forms, User Interface\Controls, User Interface\etc." type structure? – jasonh Jun 17 at 21:09
Exactly! I also end up having directories for Extensions, and sometimes Interfaces and Enums. – nikmd23 Jun 17 at 21:35
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This is the hierarchy I typically use in medium sized projects.

A solution file consisting of 3 projects:

  1. The ASP.NET Web application project
  2. A business logic project (housing the majority of my buslogic classes)
  3. A database project (for housing my create scripts, stored procedures, etc.)

I'll have a forth project if I'm using custom WebControls. Within the Web app project, I'll have the usual folders such as css, images, includes, scripts, etc, as well as a folder for user controls if I'm using them. I almost always store my app settings in the Web.config.

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