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Refactoring with C#

You're reading from   Refactoring with C# Safely improve .NET applications and pay down technical debt with Visual Studio, .NET 8, and C# 12

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2023
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781835089989
Length 434 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Matt Eland Matt Eland
Author Profile Icon Matt Eland
Matt Eland
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Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Refactoring with C# in Visual Studio FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Technical Debt, Code Smells, and Refactoring 3. Chapter 2: Introduction to Refactoring 4. Chapter 3: Refactoring Code Flow and Iteration 5. Chapter 4: Refactoring at the Method Level 6. Chapter 5: Object-Oriented Refactoring 7. Part 2: Refactoring Safely
8. Chapter 6: Unit Testing 9. Chapter 7: Test-Driven Development 10. Chapter 8: Avoiding Code Anti-Patterns with SOLID 11. Chapter 9: Advanced Unit Testing 12. Chapter 10: Defensive Coding Techniques 13. Part 3: Advanced Refactoring with AI and Code Analysis
14. Chapter 11: AI-Assisted Refactoring with GitHub Copilot 15. Chapter 12: Code Analysis in Visual Studio 16. Chapter 13: Creating a Roslyn Analyzer 17. Chapter 14: Refactoring Code with Roslyn Analyzers 18. Part 4: Refactoring in the Enterprise
19. Chapter 15: Communicating Technical Debt 20. Chapter 16: Adopting Code Standards 21. Chapter 17: Agile Refactoring 22. Index 23. Other Books You May Enjoy

Drafting documentation with GitHub Copilot Chat

Over the years, I’ve learned that developers don’t always like to document their code. While some code truly is self-documenting as developers claim, other areas require proper documentation.

In C#, we document public methods with XML documentation, such as the sample comment for the DisplayRandomNumbers method:

/// <summary>
/// Displays a sequence of 10 random numbers.
/// </summary>
public void DisplayRandomNumbers() {

This specially formatted comment is interpreted by Visual Studio to display additional help in the editor. This extra information appears in the editor when you are trying to invoke your method, as shown in Figure 11.12:

Figure 11.12 – Visual Studio showing a tooltip containing the method comment

Figure 11.12 – Visual Studio showing a tooltip containing the method comment

Although the sample documentation we saw a moment ago was relatively straightforward, documentation gets a bit more complex when you have return values...

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