I just tried FxCop. It does detect unused private methods, but not unused public. Is there a custom rule that I can download, plug-in that will detect public methods that aren't called from within the same assembly?
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NDepend is your friend for this kind of thing |
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This might be helpful (depending on what you're doing - I assume that the methods are covered by tests if in a library.): http://www.truewill.net/myblog/index.php/2008/01/27/detecting_unused_methods_in_c |
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How would it know that the public methods are unused? By marking a method as public it can be accessed by any application which references your library. |
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If a method is unused and public FxCop assumes that you have made it public for external things to access. If unused public methods lead to FxCop warnings writing APIs and the like would be a pain - you'd get loads of FxCop warnings for methods you intend others to use. If you don't need anything external to access your assembly/exe consider find-replacing If you do need external access find which methods are really needed to be external, and make all the rest internal. Any methods you make externally visible could have unit tests too. |
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Corey, my answer of using FxCop had assumed you were interested in removing unused private members, however to solve the problem with other cases you can try using NDepend. Here is some CQL to detect unused public members (adapted from an article listed below):
Source: Patrick Smacchia's "Code metrics on Coupling, Dead Code, Design flaws and Re-engineering. The article also goes over detecting dead fields and types. (EDIT: made answer more understandable) |
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