15

I find myself adding dependencies a lot to constructors like so:

public class SomeClass() {
    private ISomeService _service;
    private IAnotherService _anotherService;
    public SomeClass(ISomeService service, IAnotherService anotherService) {
        _service = service;
        _anotherService = anotherService;
    }
}

They're quite tedious to write, I've been looking for code snippets in visual studio to automatically add one to the constructor but haven't found one.

What I want is:

  • When adding a dependency to a constructor some snippet automatically creates a local variable and assigns to it.

OR

  • Add a private variable and then some snippet automatically adds it to the constructor and assigns it to the local variable.
4
  • Specify the version of C# being targeting as well as visual studio version; that could provide a differing answers.
    – ΩmegaMan
    Feb 1, 2016 at 20:27
  • @OmegaMan vs 2015, .net 4.5 Feb 1, 2016 at 20:36
  • No idea, what you're asking. You want to generate a constructor by selecting private fields?
    – Jannik
    Feb 2, 2016 at 7:06
  • @Jannik yes, see my updated answer Feb 2, 2016 at 9:27

7 Answers 7

13
+50

If you have R# you can enter the field declarations and then highlight them and hit Alt-Enter which will give you the option to generate the constructor and field assignments.

enter image description here

2
  • Been using this for a few days now and it's really really nice. Feb 5, 2016 at 12:36
  • 1
    Every once in a while, I get to stackoverflow to find some "nice to have" feature I would use in vanilla Visual Studio. 90% of the time, the accepted answer is using Resharper. I find this really annoying because Resharper is quite clunky and adds significant overhead on the IDE...
    – Sbu
    Feb 10, 2019 at 6:12
8

If you don't have Resharper, you can add the parameter on the constructor, write the assignament to an unexisting property and hit CTRL+. . This will prompt you with the options to automatically create a property or field for you.

For example, you have this class:

public class MyClass 
{ 
    public MyClass()
    { 
    }
}

You then add the parameter to the constructor, and the assignament:

public class MyClass 
{ 
    public MyClass(IDependency myDependency)
    { 
         this.myDependency = myDependency;
    }
}

And hit CTRL+. while on the asignament line, and select create field, and you'll get this:

public class MyClass 
{         
    IDependency myDependency;

    public MyClass(IDependency myDependency)
    { 
         this.myDependency = myDependency;
    }
}
1
  • VS 2017 - FIXED. See Simon Budin's question below: all this is automated now in much less work than this answer.
    – FastAl
    Apr 1, 2019 at 19:14
6

I don't know about previous versions, but in vanilla Visual Studio 2017, you can actually add a constructor parameter

public SomeClass(ISomeService service)
{ 
}

Then put your cursor on service and from "Quick actions" you can chose Introduce and initialize field _someService which will do what you want :

private readonly ISomeService _someService;

public SomeClass(ISomeService service)
{ 
    _someService = service;
}
1
  • I misread your comment but had a happy accident: You can also put your cursor on the declaration and choose a Quick Action to add the declared property/field to a constructor. This just saved me a lot of time, thank you very very much. Dec 18, 2020 at 8:40
0

You can easily add code snippets as you like, defining it in XAML and adding it the editior, you can use place holders like "class name" to use it as a constructor for example, and then place your variables in it as static text

I don't want to write the code because it's duplicated you can check out how to do it here: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms242312.aspx?f=255&MSPPError=-2147217396

you can also see this question: How can I automatically generate a constructor that receives and stores services for free?

0

what you are trying to do with the ISomeService and IAnotherService is to do dependency inversion.

I would strongly recommend you combine this with a dependency injection framework. There are many available but one i would recommend is MEF. MEF is build into the .net framework. For example your code would look like this with MEF

[Export(typeof(ISomeService))]
public class SomeService : ISomeService {
}


public class SomeClass {

   [Import]
   public ISomeService SomeService {get; set;}

   [Import]
   public IAnotherService AnotherService {get; set;}

}

Now MEF will actually ensure your SomeService and AnotherService Properties are filled when your class is created. It will construct (if needed) a instance of SomeService, fill all it's dependencies and put it in the right property. You can even control if you want your services instantiated as singletons or as a new service instance each time you need one.

for more details on MEF you can look here https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee155691(v=vs.110).aspx

This should avoid writing the many constructors that do nothing other than initializing services.

3
  • I'm using simpleinjector. I wasn't asking how to do di. Seems what you do is just property injection, which I want to avoid since it encourages god like classes. Feb 5, 2016 at 8:32
  • you were askind how to avoid writing tedious boilerplating. If i have a IGodService property or if i add IGodService as an argument to a constructor. Either one allows a developer to write poor code. This way (propertyInjection) just avoids the boilerplate
    – Batavia
    Feb 5, 2016 at 11:36
  • You are right about the tedious boilerplating, thanks for the suggestion. What I meant was the class itself (where one is injecting) is more likely to become a godclass with property injection, because you don't see clear how many dependencies you are actually injecting. Not that it is wrong per se (that's a whole new discussion) and certainly a relevant answer, just not what I'm looking for. Feb 5, 2016 at 12:33
0

Telerik's JustCode can do exactly what you need.
if you have an unused argument in the constructor you can create a field and initialise it. http://www.telerik.com/products/justcode/quick-fixes.aspx

0

I was looking for exactly this when I found this library of snippets. Depending on how many parameters you need, you can use ctor1p, ctor2p.. so on. It creates the constructor with number of params specified and also generates a private field corresponding to each of the injected param.

It works just fine when you're writing the constructor for the first time.

If you have an existing constructor with/without parameters and you'd like to inject a new parameter using these snippets, you will have to rewrite your constructor which will be difficult than just injecting the parameter manually and using ctrl + ..

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