dotnet-apiport
format
dotnet-apiport | format | |
---|---|---|
4 | 19 | |
979 | 1,904 | |
- | 0.8% | |
7.3 | 9.4 | |
over 1 year ago | 2 days ago | |
C# | C# | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
dotnet-apiport
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.NET MAUI and .NET 6/7 we feel the assembly hell again
There are a few tools that can help in the process. Years back I used a tool named Project2015to2017: https://github.com/hvanbakel/CsprojToVs2017. Since then, Microsoft also released a tool: https://github.com/dotnet/upgrade-assistant. There was also this tool but it looks like it has been discontinued: https://github.com/microsoft/dotnet-apiport
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Aug 9, 2022 - Microsoft releases .NET Framework 4.8.1 - for Windows 10+ and Windows Server 2022+ only?
Then why does it matter that .NET Framework 4.8.1 doesn't support old servers. You're already on borrowed time. .NET Framework will probably EOL somewhere around 2026-27. If the cost to migrate to .NET 6 isn't worth it, then you might as well start retiring the software because you're basically saying it's not important enough to keep updated. The migration from 4.6+ to .NET 6 really isn't difficult unless you've got some weird obscure dependencies that haven't been updated yet and aren't open source. Have you even tried the portability analyzer? I work in consulting, and we hear this a lot, "oh our code is just too old and it's too much effort to port it to .NET Core", and from what I've seen the last few years, unless your project is still running in VB.NET with Web Forms and ASP, you can most likely upgrade to .NET 6 with way less effort than you expect.
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Which linters are you using for CI environments?
https://github.com/microsoft/dotnet-apiport for portability issues
- New .NET REST API application needs to utilize .NET Framework 4.0 libraries. What are my options?
format
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What We Need Instead of "Web Components"
C# has https://github.com/dotnet/format but because C# is, well, not JS, the importance of linting is far less significant. Instead, there are hundreds of out-of-box analyzers that highlight problematic patterns or likely mistakes in the code and there are even more that you can enable through extensions (like Roslynator) or through packages that are 'dotnet add package' away.
On the package management - it couldn't be more different between Java and C# and it's incorrect to compare the two. .NET has few if any issues of the former.
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Enhancing Your Open-Source Project with Static Analysis Tools
In my project, I incorporated a source code formatter provided by the dotnet framework. I also added .editorconfig file to the root directory of my project. This file defines formatting rules, such as indent style and indent size, ensuring consistency throughout the codebase.
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Rider - Formatting across projects
However: It would appear that dotnet has a lot of extension values for editorconfig - does Rider support all of those? Some of those? Is there documentation of any extension?
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100% deterministic c# formatter
Like this post explains: https://github.com/dotnet/format/issues/879
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Dotnet, C#, code format on JetBrain IDE Rider
Dotnet Format
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Enforcing .NET code style rules at compile time
Oh, I'm using .net format. https://github.com/dotnet/format . I will take a look at csharpier to compare both :)
- Migrating from JS/TS ecosystem to Blazor
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Which linters are you using for CI environments?
- dotnet format but this is not a linter I think?
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[Avançado] Criando templates customizados em C#
Para formatar seu código instale o dotnet format e execute o seguinte comando:
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How do you format?
dotnet format does not break lines when they get too long, or collapse lines if they are too short and could be fit on the same line. See https://github.com/dotnet/format/issues/246. Another way to say it - no matter where you put linebreaks in a given code file, csharpier will produce the same output. dotnet format would produce a different output based on where current line breaks exist.
What are some alternatives?
csharpier - CSharpier is an opinionated code formatter for c#.
GLSL - VSIX Project that provides GLSL language integration.
omnisharp-vscode - Official C# support for Visual Studio Code [Moved to: https://github.com/dotnet/vscode-csharp]
Unchase.Odata.Connectedservice - :scroll: A Visual Studio extension for connecting to OData services with generating client-side C# proxy-classes
CodeMaid - CodeMaid is an open source Visual Studio extension to cleanup and simplify our C#, C++, F#, VB, PHP, PowerShell, JSON, XAML, XML, ASP, HTML, CSS, LESS, SCSS, JavaScript and TypeScript coding.
NsDepCop - NsDepCop is a static code analysis tool that helps to enforce namespace dependency rules in C# projects. No more unplanned or unnoticed dependencies in your system.
StyleCopAnalyzers - An implementation of StyleCop rules using the .NET Compiler Platform
upgrade-assistant - A tool to assist developers in upgrading .NET Framework applications to .NET 6 and beyond
prettier - Prettier is an opinionated code formatter.
VsixBlazorMinimalProjectTemplate - A Visual Studio extension for a .Net standard project template for a minimal Blazor web app.
dotnet-full-framework-ci-sandbox - This repository aims to show how to create GitHub Actions to: Build and Test a .Net Full Framework Web API project; Check the code formatting (.NET / C#); Run SonarQube code static analysis.