In Visual Studio 2008, if I have a long line of code, how can i get that to breakup into multiple lines?
public static void somemethod(param1, param2, param3, more params etc...)
How can I make this 1 line of code span 2 or 3 lines?
Hit the enter key.
public static somemethod(param1,
param2,
param3,
more params etc...)
...is perfectly valid.
C# is not line based, so you can split the statements anywhere but inside an identifier:
public static void somemethod(
int param1,
int param2,
int param3,
more params etc...
)
You can even write something like:
for
(
int
i
=
0
;
i
<
10
;
i
++
)
{
Console
.
WriteLine
(
i
)
;
}
To break strings you can place a _
at the break in VB.Net and in C# you put @
before the string.
Code in C#:
string s=@"sdsdsdsd
dfdfdfdfdf
fdfdfdfdf";
Code in VB
s="fdfdfdfdfdf _
dfdfdfdfdfdf "
You have a couple options:
^.^120
Edit: Seeing the marked answer - I rather assumed that part was known. :o
You mean how do you do it automatically, or by hand? There are some tools like Resharper that have features to "wrap" long lines of code. If you want to do it manually, then just press the Enter key anywhere that's not in the middle of an identifier.
C# doesn't need any line continuation characters (the way basic does). Just insert a line break anywhere in the line.
public static somemethod(type param1,
type param2,
type param3)
{
}
works just fine.
If you look at linq and fluent interface samples you will see some idiomatic ways to break long lines:
builder
.AddSomething()
.If((z) => z.SomeCondition)
.AddSomethingElse();
The accepted answer provides one way to divide a line into multiple lines, but I just wanted to add this; how dividing lines can increase readability. It's just a matter of choice what we want to follow.
What I don't try to follow, as I find it a little hard to differentiate parameter from the function name.
// Arguments on first line forbidden when not using vertical alignment.
var a = someObject.LongFunctionName("csharp", "value 1", "value 2"
OtherFunction(val1, val2))
// Further indentation required as indentation is not distinguishable.
public void MyFunction(
value1, value2,
Value3,
value4)
{
//..
}
// Further indentation required for parameters.
public void MyFunction(
value1, value2, Value3, value4)
{
//..
}
What I generally go for
// Aligned with opening delimiter.
var a = someObject.LongFunctionName("csharp", "value 1", "value 2"
OtherFunction(val1, val2))
// Aligned with opening delimiter.
public void MyFunction(value1, value2, value3,
value4)
{
//..
}
// Add a tab spaces (an extra level of indentation) to distinguish arguments from the rest.
public void MyFunction(
value1, value2, value3,
value4)
{
//..
}
var a = someObject.LongFunctionName(
"csharp", "value 1", "value 2"
OtherFunction(val1, val2));
At the end, in case of any doubts use your judgement what suits the best.