248

I have a project with over 500 Missing XML Comment warnings. I know I can remove the XML Comment feature, or paste empty comment snippets everywhere, but I'd prefer a generic solution where I can make one change that disables all warnings of this type.

What I do just now is putting

///<Summary>
/// 
///</Summary>

or

#pragma warning disable 1591

was just curious if it would be possible.

4
  • 3
    What is the actual question? Would you like to know another way to disable the warnings that are generated when the XML comments are missing? In the project's properties change to the "Build" tab and uncheck "XML documentation file". However, I'd suggest to not suppress the warnings but to add the missing documentation. Dec 15, 2011 at 12:48
  • That is absolutely correct but was just curious about how if we can solve this from one place as i was new to this. Dec 15, 2011 at 14:29
  • These related questions may help: stackoverflow.com/questions/11444631/… stackoverflow.com/questions/3630282/…
    – Mightymuke
    Jul 23, 2012 at 3:24
  • 1
    The warning only appears for members that are visible to other assemblies. Often people make classes (and interfaces, enums, etc.) public for no good reason. In that case an easy (and in my opinion good) fix is to just remove the word public (or replace it with a redundant internal keyword, depending on preferred style) from the outermost enclosing type. Then all CS1591 warnings about this type and its members disappear. Of course you may still have to keep some types public. But in that case it is fair that you require documenting their public parts properly. Feb 23, 2018 at 9:56

8 Answers 8

376

As suggested above, in general I don't think that these warnings should be ignored (suppressed). To summarise, the ways around the warning would be to:

  • Suppress the warning by changing the project Properties > Build > Errors and warnings > Suppress warnings by entering 1591
  • Add the XML documentation tags (GhostDoc can be quite handy for that)
  • Suppress the warning via compiler options
  • Uncheck the "XML documentation file" checkbox in project Properties > Build > Output
  • Add #pragma warning disable 1591 at the top of the respective file and #pragma warning restore 1591 at the bottom
12
  • 224
    Please, please don't use GhostDoc. If a comment can be inferred from the method name it can be inferred better by a human. This adds zero value. That time would be better spent congratulating yourself on a well-named method.
    – JRoughan
    Jun 29, 2012 at 1:08
  • 30
    I have to disagree, GhostDoc helps me to quickly add the required list of paramaters and a return tag (if the method is not void). I do use and like it, and I know quite a few other people who also do. It is true, however, that the description in the summary might need some editing, but this counts for most automatisms in such cases. Jul 1, 2012 at 13:19
  • 40
    If all it did was add placeholders it would be a nice little time saver, but the number of codebases I've seen where developers leave the generated text makes we think we just aren't collectively mature enough to use it. Comments are a (often necessary) crutch for code that isn't self-documenting and by offering shortcuts this tool has a negative net benefit on the worlds code.
    – JRoughan
    Jul 3, 2012 at 9:43
  • 32
    @JRoughan: I completely agree. The worst part is, when you finally find the time to properly document your code, these tools make it impossible to tell how thorough your real documentation coverage is. Any tool that calculates documentation coverage will always read 100%. So you literally have to go through the mentally exhausting task of reading every XML comment and evaluating whether it is sufficient to document the code. Having done this on a large project, I can tell you, it's not fun at all. Please people! Do not use these auto-documentation tools!
    – HiredMind
    Nov 30, 2012 at 23:29
  • 41
    @Gorgsenegger: Not in this case. It is not the tool that's flawed, it's the entire concept. VS2012 adds method/parameter stubs to standardized XML comments if that is what you want. But adding comments that are simply longer versions of the method names and calling it documentation is just visual clutter.
    – HiredMind
    Jan 9, 2013 at 6:13
102

Disable the warning: Go to the Project properties(Right click on your project and choose Properties from the context menu) Go to the Build tab enter image description here

Add 1591 to the Suppress warnings textbox enter image description here

3
  • 7
    Works like a charm with comma-separated lists: "S125,CS1591,S1172". After a build the warings disappeared. Jan 19, 2017 at 14:22
  • 23
    Thanks for answering the question and not lecturing on whether or not to suppress the warnings! Mar 16, 2018 at 16:00
  • IMHO, this is the preferred option as it allows turning off for just projects that we don't want it, like unit tests, while keeping it for the others.
    – Michael
    Mar 26, 2023 at 15:06
83

You can also modify your project's .csproj file to include a <noWarn>1591</noWarn> tag inside of the first <PropertyGroup>. Originally from Alexandru Bucur's Article Here

<Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk">
  <PropertyGroup>
    ...
    <NoWarn>1591</NoWarn>
  </PropertyGroup>
  ...
</Project>
3
  • 6
    This should be the answear for current days. Feb 3, 2019 at 2:31
  • 7
    Agreed. Most of the answers don't work with other editors, such as Visual Studio Code. Feb 22, 2019 at 17:05
  • In my case it needed to be <NoWarn>$(NoWarn);CS1591</NoWarn>
    – Gandalf458
    Jan 26 at 4:01
15

Go into project properties and uncheck the generate XML document option.

Uncheck XML documentation file

Recompile and the warnings should go away.

3
  • 3
    This is a good approach as long as you don't need to generate the XML docs and you don't mind that the XML comments won't be validated.
    – Keith
    Oct 10, 2015 at 16:48
  • 1
    This does not work if you want to keep the warnings from files that are not auto-generated. Removing all warnings just to get rid of a subset of warnings seems a bit overkill to me. Besides, in most companies, it is common practice to actually create XML comments in all files that don't contain auto-generated code. Also, the user asked for a solution that does not simply remove the XML comment feature, so this does not answer the question. Dec 10, 2015 at 14:53
  • 1
    This helped me figure out why I was getting the warning about XML comments being disabled so I could fix it by checking the box, basically doing the opposite of what this Answer says. Nov 12, 2020 at 16:16
9

Visual Studio 2022:

I would recommend to use .editorconfig file in the Visual Studio to set a common code style across all solution.

In this case, just add this code manually to the .editorconfig file:

# SA0001: XML comment analysis is disabled due to project configuration
dotnet_diagnostic.SA0001.severity = none

NOTE: For me, suppressing SA0001 from the Editor Config designer not working.

Only manual setting rule in the file.

4

This would have been a comment but I couldn't get it to fit the limitation:

I would love to disable them just for the Reference.cs and WebService imports. Actually, I'm using a macro to do it for a file. Just open the file and execute this macro (tested in VS2010):

Sub PragmaWarningDisableForOpenFile()
    DTE.ActiveDocument.Selection.StartOfDocument()
    DTE.ActiveDocument.Selection.NewLine()
    DTE.ActiveDocument.Selection.LineUp()
    DTE.ActiveDocument.Selection.Insert("#pragma warning disable 1591")
    DTE.ActiveDocument.Selection.EndOfDocument()
    DTE.ActiveDocument.Selection.NewLine()
    DTE.ActiveDocument.Selection.Insert("#pragma warning restore 1591")
    DTE.ActiveDocument.Save()
End Sub

There is really no way to do this automatically? You would have to redo this every time the auto-generated code overrides the file.

4
  • 2
    I think this warning shouldn't show up for auto-generated content, maybe you'll have to check the corresponding setting in the project's properties. May 12, 2012 at 12:57
  • 1
    Nope, it's all shown by just enabling XML-Comment warnings. And there is no such option to disable it just for autogenerated code. Therefor the snipped when you're in need of regenerating the code.
    – Kjellski
    May 12, 2012 at 20:15
  • Under project properties Code Analysis, there is an option Supress results from generated code. Having to rerun a macro after each code regeneration isn't really a solution IMO. If the option above doesn't work for you, perhaps the code generator can be adjusted to automatically add the pragma directive instead?
    – Laoujin
    Mar 27, 2013 at 14:39
  • @Laoujin thanks for your comment, but as I've mentioned I don't like this solution either. I can't see a reason for the downvote, I've used the setting you're mentioning without success. Any chance you try your solution for WebService imports?
    – Kjellski
    Mar 27, 2013 at 21:30
4

You can disable this selectively on a per-file basis using an .editorconfig file - for example, if you have a specific source file (or multiple files), you can use something like:

# single file
[IgnoreThisFile.cs]
dotnet_diagnostic.CS1591.severity = none

# multiple files, matching on specific naming convention
[*{Type,Stuff,Things}.cs]
dotnet_diagnostic.CS1591.severity = none

Note that I've had mixed experiences with consistently managing this warning but in the current version (17.4.4+) of VS2022, it seems to stick. Make sure the .editorconfig is at a "high" enough level in your folder structure that it applies across all of your source files (or alternatively, use multiple files at specific folder levels depending on your needs).

1
  • THIS is the answer I was looking for. I want everything in the solution documented except for the classes that occur in *.designer.cs files, and this is, by far, the best current solution for that, in visual studio. And it's not as fragile or arcane as the SuppressMessageAttribute, and doesn't require the CODE_ANALYSIS symbol to be defined, like that attribute does. Jun 9, 2023 at 21:36
1

To fix a violation of this rule, enable the XML documentation file as part of the project output by adding true to your project file.

Mentioned at:

https://github.com/DotNetAnalyzers/StyleCopAnalyzers/blob/master/documentation/SA0001.md#how-to-fix-violations

1
  • This is not the same warning message. In fact, enabling the XML documentation is what causes the warning message to show up in the first place. Aug 22, 2023 at 15:00

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