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I've just installed resharper and it's letting me know the namespaces i'm not actually using in each of my classes.

which lead me to the question - is there actually any overhead in leaving these, unused, using declarations in?

is it just a matter of tight code, or is there a performance hit in invoking these namespaces when i don't need to?

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i was surprised i couldn't find it too.. feel free to close if it's a dup. – nailitdown Mar 13 at 2:29
Duplicate: "Why removing unused usings in C#?" => stackoverflow.com/questions/629667/… – Sung Meister Mar 13 at 2:29
@nailitdown: thank god, you added a "using" tag. A question below yours was the one I was looking for when I searched by "tag" – Sung Meister Mar 13 at 2:30
no worries you can close it, i have my answer :) – nailitdown Mar 13 at 2:30
I blame this all on SO search engine! ;) "Using" is not a good keyword to search for... – Sung Meister Mar 13 at 2:33
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4 Answers

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From The C# Team's answers to frequently asked questions:

When you add assembly references or make use of the 'using' keyword, csc.exe will ignore any assembly which you have not actually made use of in your code ... Don't [waste] your time stripping out unused 'using' statements or assembly references from your application. The C# compiler will do so for you automatically.

You can verify that this is actually the case by calling Assembly.GetReferencedAssemblies(); you'll see that anything that isn't used won't actually be included in the list.

The main utility in stripping out unused ones is

  • It is easier to see what your code is actually using
  • It will keep your Intellisense from being polluted with things that you aren't actually going to use.
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There are some performance reasons to strip down using statements:

  • VS's IntelliSense runs faster when there is less data to look through

However, note all these reasons are compile-time specific. The compiler strips unused usings automatically.

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+1 for the intellisense comment; that's a good point ;] – Daniel LeCheminant Mar 13 at 2:25
Note to anyone: feel free to add your own points. This is a CW answer. (I won't farm rep. ;P) – strager Mar 13 at 2:26
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The biggest "overhead" in unusesd using statements is understanding your code :)

Removing unused ones makes your code tidier and easier for somebody else to read and maintain.

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The C# code editor in Visual Studio 2008 has a feature to remove unused using statements.

Right-click and select Organize Usings | Remove Unused Usings.

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grand - that works a treat. – nailitdown Mar 13 at 3:21

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