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Some nice code editor features provided by the VS 2010 Power Tool Extensions
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Published:
04 Aug 2010
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Abstract
In this article, Scott examines the features of the code editor included with Visual Studio 2010 Power Tool Extensions. He provides a detailed overview of new features such as Ctrl+Click Go to Definition, Triple Click Selection, Alt Up/Down Arrow Line Movement. Towards the end of the article, Scott covers the usage of Column Guides including a short reference about an update which was released for Power Tool Extensions by the Visual Studio 2010 Team. |
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by Scott Guthrie
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Introduction |
Republished with Permission - Original Article
I’ve blogged in the past about the VS 2010 Productivity Power Tool Extensions – a free set of
Visual Studio 2010 extensions that provide some nice additional functionality.
You can read my previous blog posts about it here and here. In today’s post I’m going to briefly highlight
a few small, but nice, code editor capabilities that are enabled when you
install the free extensions (and which I didn’t highlight in my previous blog
posts).
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Ctrl+Click "Go to Definition" |
One of the small, but useful, features that I find myself
using a lot with the extensions is the "Ctrl + Click” go to definition
feature.
For those of you who haven’t tried it, it enables you to
quickly navigate to the definition of a member or type within your code.
You can accomplish the same behavior out of the box with Visual Studio by
right-clicking on a member/type and then choosing the “Go to Definition”
context menu item – or by moving your cursor over a type/member and then
pressing the F12 key. But for some reason I’ve found the Ctrl+Click
gesture provided by the VS 2010 Power Tool Extensions more natural and faster to
use (since for my keyboard the F12 key requires a split-second extra finger
move to use – whereas the control key is always in easy reach).
To try out the “Ctrl+Click” behavior, just hold down the
“Ctrl” key and use your mouse to hover over a type or member in your
code. When the extension is enabled you’ll find that this causes a
hyperlink to appear under each type/member you hover over:
Clicking the hyperlink will immediately navigate you to the
definition of the type/member within your code:
Note that the “go-to-definition” feature in VS can also be
used on a type that you don’t have source access to. For example, like
with the DbSet<T> collection I used in my EF “code-first” blog post yesterday:
When you click a type referenced from a binary library, VS
will automatically generate a class definition based on the signature compiled
into the assembly:
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Triple Click Selection |
Another one of the "small but useful" features
provided with the power tool extensions that I find myself using a lot is the
“triple click” feature.
Today with VS you can double-click on a word to automatically
select it:
When the “Triple Click” extension is enabled you can now
also triple-click on a line to automatically select the entire line:
This behavior has been supported in Word for awhile.
Until I saw that there was a power tools extension for it I didn’t actually
realize that VS didn’t already do it by default. Well – now you can.
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"Alt Up/Down Arrow" Line Movement |
Another “small but useful” feature provided by the power
tool extensions is the ability to easily move lines of code up/down within the
editor.
Simply select either a single line of code, or a block of
multiple lines of code, within the editor:
Then hold down the “alt” key, and press either the up or
down arrow on your keyboard. This will cause the editor to move the selected
code up or down within the editor (without you having to copy/paste or move
anything around manually):
This is another one of those features that Word has had for
awhile – and which is nice to now have in VS.
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Column Guides |
Column guidelines allow you display a vertical band within
the code editor. This is useful to help identify the maximum size a
single line of text should be within your code (for example: to avoid wrapping
when printing it out).
The power tool extensions enable you to add a column guide
pretty easily. Just cursor over in your code editor to where you want the
guideline to be (note: you can see the exact line column count at the bottom of
the editor):
Then right-click and choose the
“Guidelines->Add Guideline” menu command:
This will then cause VS to show a column
guide-line in all code editor windows at that column width – making it easier
to see when you’ve written code or a comment that wraps beyond that:
If you want to remove a guideline, you need to move your
editor cursor to be at the same column width as the guideline. You can
then right-click and use the “Guidelines->Remove Guideline” command to
remove it.
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Extensions Update |
In case you missed it, the Visual Studio team last week made
a minor update to the VS 2010 Productivity Power Tool Extensions to fix a few bugs
and performance issues that people reported with the last release.
Sean has a blog post with more details about the update here. The update included fixes for:
Poor performance with Solution Navigator searches on large
projects. In this revision, we've made some optimizations to the search
algorithm. Search will also now only be initiated after two characters are
typed in the search box.
Items in Solution Folders were not sorted. In this
revision, they are sorted alphabetically.
Invoking Quick Access could cause a crash on some machine
configurations. This issue has been resolved in the current revision.
Ctrl+1 & Ctrl+2 were not configurable in the Solution
Navigator, which blocked the ability to type @ on some keyboards. This revision
provides the Edit.ShowSolutionNavigatorPopupForSelection &
Edit.ShowSolutionNavigatorPopupForFile commands which can be rebound using
Tools => Options => Environment => Keyboard.
If you have a previous build of the Power Tool Extensions
installed you use the “Tools->Extension Manager” menu command, select the
power tools extension and then click the “update” button to upgrade to the
latest build.
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Summary |
If you haven’t tried out the VS 2010 Productivity Power Tool Extensions yet, I’d
encourage you to give it a try. It includes some nice additional functionality
which can help save you keystrokes and time as you work within Visual
Studio. I’ve only covered a few of the features in this post and my
previous two posts – there are a lot more cool things in there that I haven’t
blogged about yet.
You can also now enable/disable each individual feature
within the extensions pack – allowing you to selectively choose what you want
to use. Use the “Tools->Options” menu command, and navigate to the
“Power Productivity Tools” tree-view item to enable/disable individual
features.
Hope this helps,
Scott
Follow me at: twitter.com/scottgu
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