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Possible Duplicate:
Do you say No to C# Regions?

Is there any obvious disadvantageous of using 'region' pre-processor directives from the coding point of view?

 #region name
     // some code block
 #end region
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4 Answers 4

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I find that regions help organize code into logical sections. I've seen many examples from respected coders that regularly use regions. As far as I'm aware, it's purely cosmetic, and doesn't impact anything.

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I wouldn't say say there are any disadvantages at all, if they are used as they are intended. The idea of them is to logically separate sections (regions) of code.

However, if they are deeply nested or methods are put outside of a region in which they would make sense, things could get confusing.

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One gotcha to be aware of is that if the region is closed, Visual Studio "Find in current document" will not search through this region.

Find in Solution, or Find in Project will find it however.

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    If you are using VS2008, there is a "Search hidden text" find option, which will look within closed regions (and methods). Mar 7, 2011 at 14:17
  • True, but that's off by default, so I consider this a gotcha - you'd need to know the gotcha, before you thought to change the option...
    – RB.
    Mar 7, 2011 at 14:31
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I can't see any. There are few things to keep in mind though: It is not an excuse to have too many lines on your page (like a form with 2000 lines. That's plain bad, even with regions, because it means you are mixing the logic layers).

I personnaly like to use regions, but some people prefer to see their whole code. It's only about preference.

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