dotnet-style
is a .NET tool that enables users to maintain a consistent and configurable C# code
style throughout projects.
It wraps existing and reputable tooling with the goal of providing a single interface for managing C# code style functionality that would otherwise require running these other tools separately. As a developer, this is less ideal because it requires me to remember the unique syntax and overall knowledge for each of the separate tools rather than just learning and using this tool instead to perform the same actions.
The .NET tool is available via NuGet.
If you want to run the .NET tool from any directory on your machine without specifying the tool's location, install it as a global tool so that it is added to a directory visible to your PATH environment variable.
Install dotnet-style
as a global .NET tool using the command dotnet tool install style --global
If you prefer to run the .NET tool from select directories, install it as a local tool. This can be beneficial in instances such as working on a shared code repository where you want any developer who clones the repo to have easy access to installing the same tools and versions as everyone else working on the same code.
Install dotnet-style
as a local .NET tool using the following steps:
-
Add a
dotnet-tools.json
manifest file in a.config
directory under the current directory using the commanddotnet new tool-manifest
if the files does not currently exist. -
Install the .NET tool using the command
dotnet tool install style
without any additional options.- This updates the
dotnet-tools.json
manifest file with information such as the tool's name and version so that all developers use the same tool.
- This updates the
-
Anyone who wants to use the local tool can run the command
dotnet tool restore
from within the repo to restore their local .NET tool(s) to match the manifest file.-
💡
Quick Tip:
You can add this as anMSBuild
PreBuildEvent
so that developers don't have to worry about manually checking for changes and restoring tools when applicable.-
Ex:
<!-- Commands to run before builds --> <Target Name="Prebuild Actions" BeforeTargets="PreBuildEvent"> <Exec Command="dotnet tool restore"/> </Target>
-
-
dotnet-style
wraps existing tools so you will need to setup the tools you plan to use along with
the code style configuration you want to enforce. More information regarding each configurable tool
is listed below:
- dotnet-format:
- This tool is bundled with the
.NET 6 SDK
and later.- If you are using an older version of .NET you'll have to install an older version of the tool as a .NET tool.
- This tool uses an EditorConfig as the configurable source of truth
for C# code style.
- Create your own
.editorconfig
file with customized settings and severities if you want to manage code style using this tool.- Examples:
- Roslyn has a pretty comprehensive and highly used EditorConfig.
- Reference the
.editorconfig
files throughout dotnet-style repository for extremely customized (probably overkill 😁) examples where there is a default root configuration that is overridden by more specific configurations when needed.
- Examples:
- Create your own
- This tool is bundled with the
- CSharpier:
- Install the tool following tool-specific documentation at the resource listed above.
- Because this is an opinionated code formatter, it only allows for a few configuration options to
be specified in a
.csharpierrc
file as explained in the tool-specific documentation.- Example: Reference the
.csharpierrc.yaml
file located in the the dotnet-style repository for an example of how that repository configures and uses the tool.
- Example: Reference the
After the dotnet-style
is installed you can run the tool by typing dotnet style
in a terminal to
run the tool as a CLI application.
Style v1.0.0
A customizable dotnet tool that helps maintain a consistent C# coding style.
USAGE
dotnet style [options]
dotnet style [command] [...]
OPTIONS
-h|--help Shows help text.
--version Shows version information.
COMMANDS
format Formats C# files according to a defined coding style.
verify Verifies that C# files comply with the defined coding style.
You can run `dotnet style [command] --help` to show help on a specific command.
Style v1.0.0
A customizable dotnet tool that helps maintain a consistent C# coding style.
USAGE
dotnet style format [options]
DESCRIPTION
Formats C# files according to a defined coding style.
OPTIONS
-p|--path The directory containing files to recursively format. Default: "C:\Users\<USER>\source\repos\Style\src".
-s|--style Whether to format code using the 'dotnet format' formatter to run code style analyzers and apply fixes. Default: "True".
-a|--analyzers Whether to format code using the 'dotnet format' formatter to run third party code style analyzers and apply fixes. Default: "True".
-w|--whitespace Whether to format code using the 'dotnet format' formatter to run whitespace formatting. Default: "False".
-c|--csharpier Whether to format code using the 'CSharpier' opinionated formatter. Note: If formatting with --whitespace, this option must be disabled to avoid conflicts as they both handle whitespace formatting. Default: "True".
-v|--verbosity The output verbosity level. Choices: "Quiet", "Normal", "Verbose". Default: "Normal".
-h|--help Shows help text.
Style v1.0.0
A customizable dotnet tool that helps maintain a consistent C# coding style.
USAGE
dotnet style verify [options]
DESCRIPTION
Verifies that C# files comply with the defined coding style.
OPTIONS
-p|--path The directory containing files to recursively verify the coding style compliance of. Default: "C:\Users\<USER>\source\repos\Style\src".
-s|--style Whether to verify code complies with the coding style used by the 'dotnet format' formatter for code style analyzer settings. Default: "True".
-a|--analyzers Whether to verify code complies with the coding style used by the 'dotnet format' formatter for third party code style analyzer settings. Default: "True".
-w|--whitespace Whether to verify code complies with the coding style used by the 'dotnet format' formatter for whitespace settings. Default: "False".
-c|--csharpier Whether to verify code complies with the coding style used by the 'CSharpier' opinionated formatter. Note: If verifying with --whitespace, this option must be disabled to avoid conflicts as they both handle whitespace formatting. Default: "True".
-v|--verbosity The output verbosity level. Choices: "Quiet", "Normal", "Verbose". Default: "Normal".
-h|--help Shows help text.
- Simple format usage:
dotnet style format
- This will recursively format C# files starting in your current directory using the C# formatters that are enabled by default.
- Customized format usage:
dotnet style format -p ./src -s true -a true -w true -c false -v verbose
- This will only format code in the .NET project defined within the relative
./src
directory using thedotnet-format
formatter instead of theCSharpier
formatter to avoid opinionated formatting. It also outputs additional information for potential debugging in the event there are errors or you want more details throughout the process.
- This will only format code in the .NET project defined within the relative
Note: You can replace format
with verify
in any of the above examples to verify whether the
current C# files comply with coding standards rather than actually modifying any code.
Since this .NET tool relies on other tools to perform the actual code style functions, there are
limitations. For instance, the dotnet format
formatter tool does not automatically fix all
warnings/errors at the time of writing this. So, depending on how strict you make your
configuration, you may still have to manually fix code to ensure compliance with your coding
standards.