This page describes how to use the Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.Metrics package to perform source code analysis of .NET assemblies from a console application. Visual Studio users can perform source code analysis by clicking the "Analyze" dropdown menu and selecting "Calculate Code Metrics", but I sought to automate this process so I can generate custom code analysis reports from console applications as part of my CI pipeline.
Automated Software Testing Series - Visual Studio Toolbox
12 videos
Welcome to the 12-part series on automated software testing, where you will learn how to increase the efficiency and ROI of your software testing. We cover unit testing, behavior style testing, mocking, integration testing and more.
پیش نمایش MAUI و اجرای یک مثال
You may have noticed it already, but when you create a console application with Visual Studio 2019, the default runtime is not .NET 5 but .NET Core 3.1! Why ? Because .NET 5 is not LTS and therefore Microsoft has intentionally chosen to offer the latest LTS version of .NET by default, ie .NET Core 3.1.
In this video, I show ten extremely useful Visual Studio features: - Enhanced Clipboard - Run To Cursor Debugging - Tracking Active Solution Explorer Item - Fast File Navigation - Tabs - Previewing and Pinning - Code Cleanup Configuration - Vertical Selection - Better Git Pull - Improved Performance On Load - Special Pasting
The key highlights to cover this month include:
- Announcing SQL Server 2019 support
- New notebook features
- Announcing PowerShell notebooks
- Announcing collapsible code cells
- Performance improvements in notebooks
- Announcing Jupyter Books
- General availability of Schema Compare and SQL Server Dacpac extensions
- Announcing Visual Studio IntelliCode extension
- Bug fixes