I use a library which provides a custom fluent implementation for string.Format
. The idea is to replace the common format construct with one that reads in a more natural way like this:
// From this
string.Format("some format string with {0} parameter", 1);
string.Format(SomeConstant, "abc");
// To this
"some format string with {0} parameter".Format(1);
SomeConstant.Format("abc");
I was trying to setup a simple structural find and replace pattern in Resharper to help me deal with those inside my code base. I noticed that if I set the format string parameter as an Argument Placeholder matching exactly one argument and the list of arguments uses entity objects (like a Person object), the previous example would turn into:
// Note that this is the System.String class and not the original format string
String.Format(someEntity);
If the entity is first converted to a string, then it matches properly and keeps the format string as I would expect.
SomeConstant.Format(someEntity.ToString());
I had to use an Expression Placeholder with an expression type of System.String
to properly match the first parameter.
Is this a bug or is there something that I am not understanding in this behavior? Why would the type of the second argument influence the match of the first argument? I have a feeling that I might be misunderstanding how Argument Placeholders are working...
NB: Using Resharper 9.0 Update 1
EDIT: As requested, here is the search pattern details:
Search Pattern: String.Format($format$, $args$)
Replace Pattern: $format$.Format($args)
format: Argument Placeholder, matching exactly one argument
args: Argument Placeholder, matching at least one argument