Reputation: 708
I'm using Visual Studio 2015. The developer before me must have used a tool to introduce huge amounts of white space into his code. Also statements are spread across many lines when they really should be on one line.
Here's a sample:
var requestCustomer = new GetCustomersByIdentifierRequest
{
Metadata =
new CustomerSearchRetrieveReference
.RequestMetadata
{
SecurityAction
= "Get",
UserId =
"WebService"
},
Params =
new GetCustomersByIdentifierParams
{
EffectiveAsOf
=
DateTime
.Today,
Identifiers
=
resultSearch
.Select
(
x
=>
x
.CustomerUd)
.ToList
(
)
}
};
It's really quite excessive. Is there some command or tool I can use to auto-format or reformat this code and at least get expressions and basic assignments onto single lines? Even if it just gets me closer, that would be a great help. It's quite tedious to do it manually.
I have tried using Ctrl+K,F but it doesn't change the code at all.
Please, something simple and preferably built-in. I'm trying not to lose too much time on this.
Upvotes: 1
Views: 1969
Reputation: 4168
Ctrl+K + Ctrl+D is limited to formatting pure white space, and won't remove unnecessary lines in a document. For example:
SomeMethod( );
Will format to SomeMethod();
However:
SomeMethod(
);
Will remain the same.
As far as I know, there is nothing built in Visual Studio 2010, 2013 or 2015 that would do this. I did find an online tool that was very close to achieving what it is you're after.
Your code sample of:
var requestCustomer = new GetCustomersByIdentifierRequest
{
Metadata =
new CustomerSearchRetrieveReference
.RequestMetadata
{
SecurityAction
= "Get",
UserId =
"WebService"
},
Params =
new GetCustomersByIdentifierParams
{
EffectiveAsOf
=
DateTime
.Today,
Identifiers
=
resultSearch
.Select
(
x
=>
x
.CustomerUd)
.ToList
(
)
}
};
Was formatted to this result:
var requestCustomer = new GetCustomersByIdentifierRequest {
Metadata =
new CustomerSearchRetrieveReference
.RequestMetadata {
SecurityAction
= "Get",
UserId =
"WebService"
},
Params =
new GetCustomersByIdentifierParams {
EffectiveAsOf
=
DateTime
.Today,
Identifiers =
resultSearch
.Select(
x =>
x
.CustomerUd)
.ToList()
}
};
It's not perfect, but it does make the code far more sane, and wouldn't be incredibly time-consuming to get it where you'd like it to be manually. It may enable Ctrl+K + Ctrl+D to handle some of the load too.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 8654
I use 'Format Document'.
Menu: Edit > Advanced > Format Document
Shortcut: Ctrl+E + Ctrl+D
It uses the formatting configuration from Tools > Options > Text Editor > C# > Formatting
Upvotes: 3