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Damn c# { }'s

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  • R RossMW

    Now, I am not interested in a VB versus C# debate but. In my job I only spend about 20% of my time coding. Being from a C# background anything new I would normally do in C# (and yes very occasionally VB), but I also have to maintain old VB code (and heaven forbid, very occasionally VB6). Normally I spent a month or two in each language (depending on the task at hand) and are happy in any camp. Changing back and forth between languages is relatively straight forward, but lately I noticed it takes me longer to get back into swing of C#. And the reason.. Well, I think its because I've got myself into bad c# typing habits from using vb. I seem to be wasting so time chasing missing / misplaced { }, forgetting semicolons case sensitivity and ()'s. Now semicolons, case and () problems are just a "Oh Bugger" moment, but as for missing / misplaced { } 's. They can be time waster. For all you pro c# developers, Do you have any tips on keeping these damn { } under control?

    A Offline
    A Offline
    Alexander DiMauro
    wrote on last edited by
    #47

    RossMW wrote:

    Do you have any tips on keeping these damn { } under control?

    Yes, it's called ReSharper[^] I've been using it since 2009 and I have no idea how to use Visual Studio anymore without it.

    I have always wished for my computer to be as easy to use as my telephone; my wish has come true because I can no longer figure out how to use my telephone - Bjarne Stroustrup The world is going to laugh at you anyway, might as well crack the 1st joke! My code has no bugs, it runs exactly as it was written.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • S Sascha Lefevre

      You can change the color of the highlighting :) clicky[^]

      If the brain were so simple we could understand it, we would be so simple we couldn't. — Lyall Watson

      D Offline
      D Offline
      DumpsterJuice
      wrote on last edited by
      #48

      What was the setting name you changed to do that? Where there's smoke, there's a Blue Screen of death.

      S 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • D DumpsterJuice

        What was the setting name you changed to do that? Where there's smoke, there's a Blue Screen of death.

        S Offline
        S Offline
        Sascha Lefevre
        wrote on last edited by
        #49

        Tools > Options > Environment > Fonts and Colors > Brace Matching (Rectangle) Just overlooked it myself first on first try ;)

        If the brain were so simple we could understand it, we would be so simple we couldn't. — Lyall Watson

        D 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • R RossMW

          Now, I am not interested in a VB versus C# debate but. In my job I only spend about 20% of my time coding. Being from a C# background anything new I would normally do in C# (and yes very occasionally VB), but I also have to maintain old VB code (and heaven forbid, very occasionally VB6). Normally I spent a month or two in each language (depending on the task at hand) and are happy in any camp. Changing back and forth between languages is relatively straight forward, but lately I noticed it takes me longer to get back into swing of C#. And the reason.. Well, I think its because I've got myself into bad c# typing habits from using vb. I seem to be wasting so time chasing missing / misplaced { }, forgetting semicolons case sensitivity and ()'s. Now semicolons, case and () problems are just a "Oh Bugger" moment, but as for missing / misplaced { } 's. They can be time waster. For all you pro c# developers, Do you have any tips on keeping these damn { } under control?

          P Offline
          P Offline
          patbob
          wrote on last edited by
          #50

          Find matching brace (most code editors have one) -- Visual Studio: ctrl-], Vi: % Use a smart editor that automatically adds, shows or otherwise assists in making sure you have balanced brackets. Consistent indentation. It also helps not to have large blocks of code, but sometimes that just can't be avoided. It is a pain sometimes, but I've just learned to live with it since the previous alternatives were much, much worse.

          We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • S Sascha Lefevre

            Tools > Options > Environment > Fonts and Colors > Brace Matching (Rectangle) Just overlooked it myself first on first try ;)

            If the brain were so simple we could understand it, we would be so simple we couldn't. — Lyall Watson

            D Offline
            D Offline
            DumpsterJuice
            wrote on last edited by
            #51

            Thanks for such a quick reply! > from Charlotte, NC, USA Where there's smoke, there's a Blue Screen of death.

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • R RossMW

              Now, I am not interested in a VB versus C# debate but. In my job I only spend about 20% of my time coding. Being from a C# background anything new I would normally do in C# (and yes very occasionally VB), but I also have to maintain old VB code (and heaven forbid, very occasionally VB6). Normally I spent a month or two in each language (depending on the task at hand) and are happy in any camp. Changing back and forth between languages is relatively straight forward, but lately I noticed it takes me longer to get back into swing of C#. And the reason.. Well, I think its because I've got myself into bad c# typing habits from using vb. I seem to be wasting so time chasing missing / misplaced { }, forgetting semicolons case sensitivity and ()'s. Now semicolons, case and () problems are just a "Oh Bugger" moment, but as for missing / misplaced { } 's. They can be time waster. For all you pro c# developers, Do you have any tips on keeping these damn { } under control?

              L Offline
              L Offline
              Lost User
              wrote on last edited by
              #52

              How long is on average one of your methods? A method shouldn't be longer than a screen, which makes around 50 lines of code. This will solve your braces problem immediately.

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • R RossMW

                Now, I am not interested in a VB versus C# debate but. In my job I only spend about 20% of my time coding. Being from a C# background anything new I would normally do in C# (and yes very occasionally VB), but I also have to maintain old VB code (and heaven forbid, very occasionally VB6). Normally I spent a month or two in each language (depending on the task at hand) and are happy in any camp. Changing back and forth between languages is relatively straight forward, but lately I noticed it takes me longer to get back into swing of C#. And the reason.. Well, I think its because I've got myself into bad c# typing habits from using vb. I seem to be wasting so time chasing missing / misplaced { }, forgetting semicolons case sensitivity and ()'s. Now semicolons, case and () problems are just a "Oh Bugger" moment, but as for missing / misplaced { } 's. They can be time waster. For all you pro c# developers, Do you have any tips on keeping these damn { } under control?

                F Offline
                F Offline
                fglenn
                wrote on last edited by
                #53

                I don't know about anyone else, but when I enter a '{', I also enter the corresponding '}' before I insert any code in between the braces. I never have a problem with unbalanced/misplaced braces.

                Fletcher Glenn

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • D DerekT P

                  Is it just me... VS2013 automatically creates the closing bracket whenever I type an opening...?

                  J Offline
                  J Offline
                  JRickey
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #54

                  It does for me, also. I still have the default setup. Note that it also does that in text documents, when I don't want it to. And in code, typing the closing element can add an extra one (I think that happens if I use cursor keys to edit before closing).

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • M Marc Clifton

                    RossMW wrote:

                    and then trying to figure which } belong with which {

                    Dang, doesn't the IDE (dimly, I'll grant) light up the matching braces? [on my high horse] If you have that much nesting, maybe you should break the function apart into smaller calls? [/on my high horse] Marc

                    Imperative to Functional Programming Succinctly Contributors Wanted for Higher Order Programming Project!

                    T Offline
                    T Offline
                    TNCaver
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #55

                    Marc Clifton wrote:

                    Dang, doesn't the IDE (dimly, I'll grant) light up the matching braces?

                    Only when you put the cursor just after the } or just before the {. Not if the cursor is inside the block in question.

                    If you think 'goto' is evil, try writing an Assembly program without JMP.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • R RossMW

                      Now, I am not interested in a VB versus C# debate but. In my job I only spend about 20% of my time coding. Being from a C# background anything new I would normally do in C# (and yes very occasionally VB), but I also have to maintain old VB code (and heaven forbid, very occasionally VB6). Normally I spent a month or two in each language (depending on the task at hand) and are happy in any camp. Changing back and forth between languages is relatively straight forward, but lately I noticed it takes me longer to get back into swing of C#. And the reason.. Well, I think its because I've got myself into bad c# typing habits from using vb. I seem to be wasting so time chasing missing / misplaced { }, forgetting semicolons case sensitivity and ()'s. Now semicolons, case and () problems are just a "Oh Bugger" moment, but as for missing / misplaced { } 's. They can be time waster. For all you pro c# developers, Do you have any tips on keeping these damn { } under control?

                      J Offline
                      J Offline
                      James Curran
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #56

                      Obviously, you are using the god-forsaken "K&R" bracing style

                      if (condition) {
                      /// stuff
                      }

                      When you choose a coding style based on readability rather than historic fanboy popularity, these problems go away:

                      if (condition)
                      {
                      // Stuff
                      }

                      Truth, James

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • R RossMW

                        Now, I am not interested in a VB versus C# debate but. In my job I only spend about 20% of my time coding. Being from a C# background anything new I would normally do in C# (and yes very occasionally VB), but I also have to maintain old VB code (and heaven forbid, very occasionally VB6). Normally I spent a month or two in each language (depending on the task at hand) and are happy in any camp. Changing back and forth between languages is relatively straight forward, but lately I noticed it takes me longer to get back into swing of C#. And the reason.. Well, I think its because I've got myself into bad c# typing habits from using vb. I seem to be wasting so time chasing missing / misplaced { }, forgetting semicolons case sensitivity and ()'s. Now semicolons, case and () problems are just a "Oh Bugger" moment, but as for missing / misplaced { } 's. They can be time waster. For all you pro c# developers, Do you have any tips on keeping these damn { } under control?

                        U Offline
                        U Offline
                        User 4598947
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #57

                        When there's too much nesting, and therefore too many braces, consider 1) refactor out inner nestings into new methods 2) label }'s:

                        namespace foo
                        {
                        public class bar
                        {
                        public void fu()
                        {
                        for(var int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
                        {
                        if(Math.PI != 0.0)
                        {

                                    } // if PI not 0
                        
                                } // for i
                        
                            } // fu
                        
                        } // bar
                        

                        } // foo

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • R RossMW

                          Now, I am not interested in a VB versus C# debate but. In my job I only spend about 20% of my time coding. Being from a C# background anything new I would normally do in C# (and yes very occasionally VB), but I also have to maintain old VB code (and heaven forbid, very occasionally VB6). Normally I spent a month or two in each language (depending on the task at hand) and are happy in any camp. Changing back and forth between languages is relatively straight forward, but lately I noticed it takes me longer to get back into swing of C#. And the reason.. Well, I think its because I've got myself into bad c# typing habits from using vb. I seem to be wasting so time chasing missing / misplaced { }, forgetting semicolons case sensitivity and ()'s. Now semicolons, case and () problems are just a "Oh Bugger" moment, but as for missing / misplaced { } 's. They can be time waster. For all you pro c# developers, Do you have any tips on keeping these damn { } under control?

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                          M Offline
                          Mark Miller
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #58

                          Productivity Power Tools [^] includes Guidelines which are helpful. VSCommands [^] has a "Code Block End Tagger" that will show a "tag" on the closing brace either all the time or only when the opening brace is not in view.

                          Sincerely, -Mark mamiller@rhsnet.org

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                          0
                          • R RossMW

                            I main problem I seem to is after a lot of if, Switch or whatever and you end up with a lot of

                            }
                            }
                            }
                            }

                            and then trying to figure which } belong with which {

                            L Offline
                            L Offline
                            Lost User
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #59

                            FWIW In VS, set focus to a brace, CTRL_} finds the matching brace.

                            There are strangers on the Plain, Croaker

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • R RossMW

                              Now, I am not interested in a VB versus C# debate but. In my job I only spend about 20% of my time coding. Being from a C# background anything new I would normally do in C# (and yes very occasionally VB), but I also have to maintain old VB code (and heaven forbid, very occasionally VB6). Normally I spent a month or two in each language (depending on the task at hand) and are happy in any camp. Changing back and forth between languages is relatively straight forward, but lately I noticed it takes me longer to get back into swing of C#. And the reason.. Well, I think its because I've got myself into bad c# typing habits from using vb. I seem to be wasting so time chasing missing / misplaced { }, forgetting semicolons case sensitivity and ()'s. Now semicolons, case and () problems are just a "Oh Bugger" moment, but as for missing / misplaced { } 's. They can be time waster. For all you pro c# developers, Do you have any tips on keeping these damn { } under control?

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                              B Offline
                              brianriggan
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #60

                              Indent Guides https://visualstudiogallery.msdn.microsoft.com/e792686d-542b-474a-8c55-630980e72c30[^] It is a visual studio addin that will help you figure out which blocks belong together. The defaults look horrible but you can custimize them. I have each level of indentation a different color. This is one addin that I can't live without.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • R RossMW

                                Now, I am not interested in a VB versus C# debate but. In my job I only spend about 20% of my time coding. Being from a C# background anything new I would normally do in C# (and yes very occasionally VB), but I also have to maintain old VB code (and heaven forbid, very occasionally VB6). Normally I spent a month or two in each language (depending on the task at hand) and are happy in any camp. Changing back and forth between languages is relatively straight forward, but lately I noticed it takes me longer to get back into swing of C#. And the reason.. Well, I think its because I've got myself into bad c# typing habits from using vb. I seem to be wasting so time chasing missing / misplaced { }, forgetting semicolons case sensitivity and ()'s. Now semicolons, case and () problems are just a "Oh Bugger" moment, but as for missing / misplaced { } 's. They can be time waster. For all you pro c# developers, Do you have any tips on keeping these damn { } under control?

                                N Offline
                                N Offline
                                nocturns2
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #61

                                In Visual Studio, you can press Ctl-K & Ctl-D that will format your document. Same as pressing Edit>Advanced>Format Document. That will give you an indication of where the faulty area is, then, you can follow the {}'s via indention. Moving from VB to C#, for a while, I followed the convention of put in all the decorations first, before inserting code. What got me was how after a period of time using c#, coding vb, I felt like I was leaving stuff out, ... in particular the semi-colons.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • R RossMW

                                  I main problem I seem to is after a lot of if, Switch or whatever and you end up with a lot of

                                  }
                                  }
                                  }
                                  }

                                  and then trying to figure which } belong with which {

                                  K Offline
                                  K Offline
                                  KP Lee
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #62

                                  You could always:

                                  }//End of switch logic
                                  }//End of if peter knows jane
                                  }//End of while loop
                                  }//Finally! end of dam program TG

                                  Of course then you would have the never put comments in code police on your tail. Also, you'd have to pray your comments are relative to what has really ended. In case you are wondering, TG is the same as in TGIF.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • R RossMW

                                    Now, I am not interested in a VB versus C# debate but. In my job I only spend about 20% of my time coding. Being from a C# background anything new I would normally do in C# (and yes very occasionally VB), but I also have to maintain old VB code (and heaven forbid, very occasionally VB6). Normally I spent a month or two in each language (depending on the task at hand) and are happy in any camp. Changing back and forth between languages is relatively straight forward, but lately I noticed it takes me longer to get back into swing of C#. And the reason.. Well, I think its because I've got myself into bad c# typing habits from using vb. I seem to be wasting so time chasing missing / misplaced { }, forgetting semicolons case sensitivity and ()'s. Now semicolons, case and () problems are just a "Oh Bugger" moment, but as for missing / misplaced { } 's. They can be time waster. For all you pro c# developers, Do you have any tips on keeping these damn { } under control?

                                    U Offline
                                    U Offline
                                    Umair Zuberi
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #63

                                    Hey, Go to Tools->Extension Manager. There are many useful extensions there for you like "Brace Completer" which will automatically puts '}' when you type '{', "Code alignment" for aligning your code automatically, "highlight all occurrences of selected word", "word wrap with auto-indent", "JScript Editor Extensions" for many useful JavaScript extensions. Hopefully it will help you better coding :)

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • R RossMW

                                      Now, I am not interested in a VB versus C# debate but. In my job I only spend about 20% of my time coding. Being from a C# background anything new I would normally do in C# (and yes very occasionally VB), but I also have to maintain old VB code (and heaven forbid, very occasionally VB6). Normally I spent a month or two in each language (depending on the task at hand) and are happy in any camp. Changing back and forth between languages is relatively straight forward, but lately I noticed it takes me longer to get back into swing of C#. And the reason.. Well, I think its because I've got myself into bad c# typing habits from using vb. I seem to be wasting so time chasing missing / misplaced { }, forgetting semicolons case sensitivity and ()'s. Now semicolons, case and () problems are just a "Oh Bugger" moment, but as for missing / misplaced { } 's. They can be time waster. For all you pro c# developers, Do you have any tips on keeping these damn { } under control?

                                      P Offline
                                      P Offline
                                      pt1401
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #64

                                      I often comment the closing brace, saves a lot of brace-matching but does add some clutter:-

                                      ...
                                      } // if
                                      } // MyMethod
                                      } // class
                                      } // namespace

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • R RossMW

                                        Now, I am not interested in a VB versus C# debate but. In my job I only spend about 20% of my time coding. Being from a C# background anything new I would normally do in C# (and yes very occasionally VB), but I also have to maintain old VB code (and heaven forbid, very occasionally VB6). Normally I spent a month or two in each language (depending on the task at hand) and are happy in any camp. Changing back and forth between languages is relatively straight forward, but lately I noticed it takes me longer to get back into swing of C#. And the reason.. Well, I think its because I've got myself into bad c# typing habits from using vb. I seem to be wasting so time chasing missing / misplaced { }, forgetting semicolons case sensitivity and ()'s. Now semicolons, case and () problems are just a "Oh Bugger" moment, but as for missing / misplaced { } 's. They can be time waster. For all you pro c# developers, Do you have any tips on keeping these damn { } under control?

                                        F Offline
                                        F Offline
                                        Frank Peelo
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #65

                                        RossMW wrote:

                                        Do you have any tips on keeping these damn { } under control?

                                        Always, always, always have my opening and closing brackets in the same row or column. And put comments after }, as Member 10707677said. Trying to figure out where the missing { is when people put the opening { on the same line as the function or if, is just making life unnecessarily hard. And sometimes I come across conditions that are so ugly, I have to do it there too...

                                        if (((x==0) && (y==1)) && (z==2) && ((w==3) && foo==bar))

                                        if ( ((x==0) && (y==1))
                                        && (z==2)
                                        && ((w==3) && foo==bar)
                                        )

                                        Occasionally, I have to go and ask whoever wrote it... why?

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • R RossMW

                                          I main problem I seem to is after a lot of if, Switch or whatever and you end up with a lot of

                                          }
                                          }
                                          }
                                          }

                                          and then trying to figure which } belong with which {

                                          U Offline
                                          U Offline
                                          User 11383510
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #66

                                          I love the code completion features in my editors. I use Visual Studio and Sharp Develop. When I type in if and hit tab it stubs in the braces and brackets. For and if/else I use ife tab. After the closing bracket I put in two slashes and a comment following the block. This way when I run into "dribble" (the stream of closing brackets yo showed) each on of the closing brackets hass a comment identifying what that bracket closes. It's tedious to get into the habit but it helps late at night when you are debugging things line by line and you get distracted by the family in your home office. ("Where the %^#$& did I leave off?")

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