Most developers I know are pretty anal about the formatting of their source code. I used to think I was pretty obsessive compulsive about it, but then I joined Microsoft and faced a whole new level of OCD (Obsessive Compulsive Disorder). For example, many require all using statements to be sorted and unused statements to be removed, which was something I never cared much about in the past.

There’s no shortcut that I know of for removing unused using statements. Simply right click in the editor and select Organize Usings > Remove and Sort**in the context menu.

SubtextSolution - Microsoft Visual Studio (Administrator)
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In Visual Studio, you can specify how you want code formatted by launching the Options dialog via Tools> Options and then select the Text Editor node. Look under the language you care about and there are multiple formatting options providing hours of fun fodder for religious debates.

Options

Once you have the settings just the way you want them, you can select the Edit > Advanced > Format Document (or simply use the shortcut CTRL + K, CTRL + D ) to format the document according to your conventions.

The problem with this approach is it’s pretty darn manual. You’ll have to remember to do it all the time, which if you really have OCD, is probably not much of a problem.

However, for those that keep forgetting these two steps and would like to avoid facing the wrath of nitpicky code reviewers (try submitting a patch to NuGet to experience the fun), you can install the Power Commands for Visual Studio via the Visual Studio Extension manager which provides an option to both format the document and sort and remove using statements every time you save the document.

I’m actually not a fan of having using statements removed on every save because I save often and it tends to remove namespaces containing extension methods that I will need, but haven’t yet used, such as System.Linq.

Formatting Every Document

Also, if you have a large solution with many collaborators, the source code can start to drift away from your OCD ideals over time. That’s why it would be nice to have a way of applying formatting to every document in your solution.

One approach is to purchase ReSharper, which I’m pretty sure can reformat an entire solution and adds a lot more knobs you can tweak for the formatting.

But for you cheap bastards, there are a couple of free approaches you can make. One approach is to write a Macro, like Brian Schmitt did. His doesn’t sort and remove using statements, but it’s a one line addition to add that.

Of course, the approach I was interested in trying was to use Powershell to do it within the NuGet Package Manager Console. A couple nights ago I was chatting with my co-worker and hacker extraordinaire, David Fowler, way too late at night about doing this and we decided to have a race to see who could implement it first.

I knew I had no chance unless I cheated so I wrote this monstrosity (I won’t even post it here I’m so ashamed). David calls it “PM code”, which in this case was well deserved as it was simply a proof of concept, but also because it’s wrong. It doesn’t traverse the files recursively. But hey, I was first! But I at least gave him the code needed to actually format the document.

It was very late and I went to sleep knowing in the morning, I’d see something elegant from David. I was not disappointed as he posted this gist.

He wrote a generic command named Recurse-Project that recursively traverses every item in every project within a solution and calls an action against each item.

That allowed him to easily write Format-Document which leverages Recurse-Project and automates calling into Visual Studio’s Format Document command.

function Format-Document {
  param(
    [parameter(ValueFromPipelineByPropertyName = $true)]
    [string[]]$ProjectName
  )
  Process {
    $ProjectName | %{ 
      Recurse-Project -ProjectName $_ -Action {
        param($item)
        if($item.Type -eq 'Folder' -or !$item.Language) {
          return
        }
    
        $win = $item.ProjectItem.Open('{7651A701-06E5-11D1-8EBD-00A0C90F26EA}')
        if ($win) {
          Write-Host "Processing `"$($item.ProjectItem.Name)`""
          [System.Threading.Thread]::Sleep(100)
          $win.Activate()
          $item.ProjectItem.Document.DTE.ExecuteCommand('Edit.FormatDocument')
          $item.ProjectItem.Document.DTE.ExecuteCommand('Edit.RemoveAndSort')
          $win.Close(1)
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Adding Commands to NuGet Powershell Profile

Great! He did the work for me. So what’s the best way to make use of his command? I could add it to a NuGet package, but that would then require that I install the package first any time I wanted to use the package. That’s not very usable. NuGet doesn’t yet support installing PS scripts at the machine level, though it’s something we’re considering.

To get this command available on my machine so I can run it no matter which solution is open, I need to set up my NuGet-specific Powershell profile as documented here.

The NuGet Powershell profile script is located at:

%UserProfile%\Documents\WindowsPowerShell\NuPack_profile.ps1

The easiest way to find the profile file is to type $profile within the NuGet Package Manager Console. The profile file doesn’t necessarily exist by default, but it’s easy enough to create it. The following screenshot shows a session where I did just that.

nuget-ps-profile

The mkdir –force (split-path $profile) command creates the WindowsPowershell directory if it doesn’t already exist.

Then simply attempting to open the script in Notepad prompts you to create the file if it doesn’t already exist. Within the profile file, you can change PowerShell settings or add new commands you might find useful.

For example, you can cut and paste the code in David’s gist and put it in here. Just make sure to omit the first example line in the gist which simply prints all project items to the console.

When you close and re-open Visual Studio, the Format-Document command will be available in the NuGet Package Manager Console. When you run the command, it will open each file and run the format command on it. It’s rather fun to watch as it feels like a ghost has taken over Visual Studio.

The script has a Thread.Sleep call for 100ms to work around a timing issue when automating Visual Studio. It can take a brief moment after you open the document before you can activate it. It doesn’t hurt anything to choose a lower number. It only means you may get the occasional error when formatting a document, but the script will simply move to the next document.

The following screenshot shows the script in action.

formatting-documents

With this in place, you can now indulge your OCD and run the Format-Document command to clean up your entire solution. I just ran it against Subtext and now can become the whitespace Nazi I’ve always wanted to be.