Is it possible to run auto-format code for all or for specific file in solution, like (Ctrl+K, Ctrl+D) formatting in Visual Studio but from it`s command line? Or use Resharper's cleanup also from command line for solution files?
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2Have you tried anything? Would you show us?– Hanlet EscañoCommented Mar 22, 2013 at 22:06
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I don't think (am afk atm so unable to test) that Ctrl+K, Ctrl+D is exclusive to ReSharper, so maybe that tag in your question is unnescessary!– JMKCommented Mar 22, 2013 at 22:25
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This answer says that Resharper API is not usefull: stackoverflow.com/questions/13729649/… This suggestion narrange.net/doc/index.htm provides third party console tool. Interesting, is it something new in new versions of VS2012 that adds such new features to command line?– Олександр КиричекCommented Mar 22, 2013 at 22:26
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I have edited your title. Please see, "Should questions include “tags” in their titles?", where the consensus is "no, they should not".– John SaundersCommented Mar 22, 2013 at 22:27
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Thanks you Jhon. JMK, Ctrl+K, Ctrl+D is for IDE. For Resharper exclusive is clean-up.– Олександр КиричекCommented Mar 22, 2013 at 22:33
5 Answers
Create your own tool. You can use EnvDTE
, EnvDTE80
to create Visual Studio project and load the files you want to format on the fly. Once you are done delete the Visual Studio project. You can specify to not to show Visual Studio window while formatting. If you are interested let me know I can give you some code to make this work.
UPDATE: I am copying the code I have. I used it to format *.js files. I removed some code which you don't need. Feel free to ask if it doesn't work.
//You need to make a reference to two dlls:
envdte
envdte80
void FormatFiles(List<FileInfo> files)
{
//If it throws exeption you may want to retry couple more times
EnvDTE.Solution soln = System.Activator.CreateInstance(Type.GetTypeFromProgID("VisualStudio.Solution.11.0")) as EnvDTE.Solution;
//try this if you have Visual Studio 2010
//EnvDTE.Solution soln = System.Activator.CreateInstance(Type.GetTypeFromProgID("VisualStudio.Solution.10.0")) as EnvDTE.Solution;
soln.DTE.MainWindow.Visible = false;
EnvDTE80.Solution2 soln2 = soln as EnvDTE80.Solution2;
//Creating Visual Studio project
string csTemplatePath = soln2.GetProjectTemplate("ConsoleApplication.zip", "CSharp");
soln.AddFromTemplate(csTemplatePath, tempPath, "FormattingFiles", false);
//If it throws exeption you may want to retry couple more times
Project project = soln.Projects.Item(1);
foreach (FileInfo file in files)
{
ProjectItem addedItem;
bool existingFile = false;
int _try = 0;
while (true)
{
try
{
string fileName = file.Name;
_try++;
if (existingFile)
{
fileName = file.Name.Substring(0, (file.Name.Length - file.Extension.Length) - 1);
fileName = fileName + "_" + _try + file.Extension;
}
addedItem = project.ProjectItems.AddFromTemplate(file.FullName, fileName);
existingFile = false;
break;
}
catch(Exception ex)
{
if (ex.Message.Contains(file.Name) && ex.Message.Contains("already a linked file"))
{
existingFile = true;
}
}
}
while (true)
{
//sometimes formatting file might throw an exception. Thats why I am using loop.
//usually first time will work
try
{
addedItem.Open(Constants.vsViewKindCode);
addedItem.Document.Activate();
addedItem.Document.DTE.ExecuteCommand("Edit.FormatDocument");
addedItem.SaveAs(file.FullName);
break;
}
catch
{
//repeat
}
}
}
try
{
soln.Close();
soln2.Close();
soln = null;
soln2 = null;
}
catch
{
//for some reason throws exception. Not all the times.
//if this doesn't closes the solution CleanUp() will take care of this thing
}
finally
{
CleanUp();
}
}
void CleanUp()
{
List<System.Diagnostics.Process> visualStudioProcesses = System.Diagnostics.Process.GetProcesses().Where(p => p.ProcessName.Contains("devenv")).ToList();
foreach (System.Diagnostics.Process process in visualStudioProcesses)
{
if (process.MainWindowTitle == "")
{
process.Kill();
break;
}
}
tempPath = System.IO.Path.GetTempPath();
tempPath = tempPath + "\\FormattingFiles";
new DirectoryInfo(tempPath).Delete(true);
}
I hope this helps.
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COMExceptions can be easily solved by properly implementing message filtering as described here. Commented Apr 6, 2016 at 10:38
To format net core c# source, use dotnet format
For .net >= 6.0 it's available by default as part of the SDK. For old .net, install the tool as per the dotnet/format project readme.
I had a need to format some code files I was generating from Razor templates. I created a shell .CSProj file in the root of my output folder, using dotnet new console
which gives you this basic file:
<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk">
<PropertyGroup>
<OutputType>Exe</OutputType>
<TargetFramework>netcoreapp2.2</TargetFramework>
<RootNamespace>dotnet_format</RootNamespace>
</PropertyGroup>
</Project>
Then run dotnet format
from a VS command prompt in that folder. It will recurse into sub-directories and format everything it finds. To format specific files you can provide a list of filenames with the --files
switch.
As a followup to Dilshod's post, if you're just looking to format a single file, here's a way of doing it that won't need a temporary path:
static void FormatFile(string file)
{
EnvDTE.Solution soln = System.Activator.CreateInstance(
Type.GetTypeFromProgID("VisualStudio.Solution.10.0")) as EnvDTE.Solution;
soln.DTE.ItemOperations.OpenFile(file);
TextSelection selection = soln.DTE.ActiveDocument.Selection as TextSelection;
selection.SelectAll();
selection.SmartFormat();
soln.DTE.ActiveDocument.Save();
}
Note that "file" will need to have the full path on disk in all likelihood. Relative paths don't seem to work (though I didn't try all that hard).
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Also, for completeness you'd probably want to implement this COM listener to catch for some random busy errors you can get: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms228772.aspx Commented Dec 8, 2013 at 2:47
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This solution doesn't work for me. It throws errors on trying to use
SmartFormat
. I also implemented theMessageFilter
Commented Apr 17, 2015 at 10:59 -
Which version of Visual Studio are you using? You'll need to make sure your "VisualStudio.Solution.10.0" matches your version. eg: for VS2013, it should be "VisualStudio.Solution.12.0". If that doesn't work, you can see what I'm currently doing at svn.darwinbots.com/Darwinbots3/Trunk/Modules/Reformatter/… and see if there's something there I'm doing I'm not mentioning. Works on my machine :) Commented Apr 17, 2015 at 18:10
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Hi Jay, thanks for responding. I ended up using the
Tools.CommandWindow
and usingdocument.Activate();
followed byCommandWindow.SendInput("Edit.FormatDocument")
Commented Apr 20, 2015 at 9:26 -
@PatrickMagee would you mind posting you complete solutions I encountered the same problem and do not know how to solve. Thanks! Commented Oct 30, 2017 at 22:54
Use CodeFormatter from the .NET Team
- Install MSBuild Tools 2015.
- Download CodeFormatter 1.0.0-alpha6.
- Add
CodeFormatter.csproj
to the root directory of your projects:
CodeFormatter.csproj
<Project xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/developer/msbuild/2003">
<ItemGroup>
<Compile Include="**\*.cs" />
</ItemGroup>
<Target Name="Compile">
<Csc Sources="@(Compile)"/>
</Target>
</Project>
Then run this from the Command Line.
> codeformatter.exe CodeFormatter.csproj /nocopyright
The result: all your projects' C# files now adhere to the majority of the .NET Foundation coding guidelines.
Remarks
- Installing MSBuild Tools 2015 means that we do not need Visual Studio.
- Adding
CodeFormatter.csproj
to the root directory recursively includes all C# files, which means the above works with project.json and *.xproj based setups.
See also
Not possible with Visual Studio, but there are command line utilities for this: http://astyle.sourceforge.net/astyle.html
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Great, thanks it is actually a solution. But last update of this project on source forge is 2011-11-21. NArrange Last Update: 2011-05-25 Maybe something new exists. Commented Mar 22, 2013 at 22:42