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Is there any way to indicate to ReSharper that a null reference won't occur because of Design-by-Contract Requires checking? For example, the following code will raise the warning (Possible 'null' assignment to entity marked with 'NotNull' attribute) in ReSharper on lines 7 and 8:

private Dictionary<string, string> _Lookup = new Dictionary<string, string>();

public void Foo(string s)
{
    Contract.Requires(!String.IsNullOrEmpty(s));

    if (_Lookup.ContainsKey(s))
        _Lookup.Remove(s);
}

What is really odd is that if you remove the Contract.Requires(...) line, the ReSharper message goes away.

Update

I found the solution through ExternalAnnotations which was also mentioned by Mike below. Here's an example of how to do it for a function in Microsoft.Contracts:

  • Create a directory called Microsoft.Contracts under the ExternalAnnotations ReSharper directory.
  • Next, Create a file called Microsoft.Contracts.xml and populate like so:

<assembly name="Microsoft.Contracts">
    <member name="M:System.Diagnostics.Contracts.Contract.Requires(System.Boolean)">
        <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionMethodAttribute.#ctor"/>
        <parameter name="condition">
            <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionConditionAttribute.#ctor(JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionConditionType)">
                <argument>0</argument>
            </attribute>
        </parameter>
    </member>
</assembly>

  • Restart Visual Studio, and the message goes away!
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3 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

Here's the solution for the current (i.e. .NET 4.0) version of Code Contracts:

Inside ...\ExternalAnnotations\mscorlib\Contracts.xml, add the following:

<assembly name="mscorlib">
<member name="M:System.Diagnostics.Contracts.Contract.Requires(System.Boolean)">
    <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionMethodAttribute.#ctor"/>
    <parameter name="condition">
        <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionConditionAttribute.#ctor(JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionConditionType)">
            <argument>0</argument>
        </attribute>
    </parameter>
</member>
<member name="M:System.Diagnostics.Contracts.Contract.Requires``1(System.Boolean)">
    <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionMethodAttribute.#ctor"/>
    <parameter name="condition">
        <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionConditionAttribute.#ctor(JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionConditionType)">
            <argument>0</argument>
        </attribute>
    </parameter>
</member>
<member name="M:System.Diagnostics.Contracts.Contract.Requires(System.Boolean,System.String)">
    <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionMethodAttribute.#ctor"/>
    <parameter name="condition">
        <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionConditionAttribute.#ctor(JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionConditionType)">
            <argument>0</argument>
        </attribute>
    </parameter>
</member>
<member name="M:System.Diagnostics.Contracts.Contract.Requires``1(System.Boolean,System.String)">
    <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionMethodAttribute.#ctor"/>
    <parameter name="condition">
        <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionConditionAttribute.#ctor(JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionConditionType)">
            <argument>0</argument>
        </attribute>
    </parameter>
</member>
<member name="M:System.Diagnostics.Contracts.Contract.Invariant(System.Boolean)">
    <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionMethodAttribute.#ctor"/>
    <parameter name="condition">
        <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionConditionAttribute.#ctor(JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionConditionType)">
            <argument>0</argument>
        </attribute>
    </parameter>
</member>
<member name="M:System.Diagnostics.Contracts.Contract.Invariant(System.Boolean,System.String)">
    <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionMethodAttribute.#ctor"/>
    <parameter name="condition">
        <attribute ctor="M:JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionConditionAttribute.#ctor(JetBrains.Annotations.AssertionConditionType)">
            <argument>0</argument>
        </attribute>
    </parameter>
</member>
</assembly>
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vote up 3 vote down

I think you can but it isn't trivial. Take a look at Resharper online help for code annotation

They annotated the BCL classes and the NUnit framework (and more) to enhance Resharpers code inspection capabilities.

For example with the NUnit asserts they annotated with an AssertionMethodAttribute. This tells Resharpers code inspection that if you got past an Assert.IsNotNull(foo); then foo must not be null and it won't produce the "Possible 'null' assignment..." warning anymore.

You could produce an xml file annotating the Contracts.Requires method to indicate that it is just like an Assert.

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vote up 1 vote down

No, you can't. While you can change the level of warning that Resharper will provide in it's options dialog, Resharper doesn't provide a way to configure it to recognize design-by-contract constraints. The fact that the message goes away, is odd.

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