An update notice reminded me of this plugin for #Jetbrains#Rider. Every #dotnet developer should use a plugin like this. I see this one supports #Resharper too, but if there's another extension like it for Visual Studio running sans-Resharper I'd love to know in order to keep my team in check.
It has become a tool that I don't need much anymore because it has helped me so much in the past to recognize complex code
The "Collection was modified" inspection in #ReSharper is quite handy. Warns you about those accidental collection updates while looping over them, resulting in a runtime error. And can fix them automatically! #csharp#dotnet
The latest #JetBrains#Fleet version has dropped, and the #dotnet experience keeps improving. It's worth checking out and keeping an eye on. It’s also pretty snappy and powered by #ReSharper.
Reading the latest #ReSharper and #JetBrainsRider release notes makes me realize (again) that suggestions and advice are so nuanced and that it takes experts to get them right. Even then, it may take a few tries.
A few changes around the recommendations and warnings around #csharp 12 primary constructors.
I’ll also add that the folks working on these products are superheroes and deserve all the praise and accolades they get.
They have the unenviable job of taking disparate technologies from several ecosystems and making a tool that interacts with all of them in one experience that works! It’s a modern miracle.
I think #dotnet folks are spoiled by tooling, but reading the overwhelmingly positive feedback from CLion Nova users writing #cplusplus with #ReSharper is a nice reminder of the joy great tooling can bring folks.
@khalidabuhakmeh@jesper_linnet Really Rider is much better than VS. But I get Khalid's point. In the game of "native" IDEs, VS is really not that bad. Try XCode (mac/ios), Eclipse for a while and see... So the gap from VS to Rider isn't as big as the gap from XCode to AppCode, from eclipse to Intellij, from Notepad++ to PhpStorm, etc...
While I appreciate what pre-commit hooks can do, they add overhead that I’m not sure is worth it for me in the long run.
If you’re looking at adding #ReSharper CLI as a pre-commit action to all #dotnet environments, here are the files for Husky.NET: task-runner.json and resharper-cli.csx (you’ll need to install the ReSharper CLI tools).