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Still in use / relevant? #267
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Seconded. |
It appears the answer to that question is a clear 👎 |
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Well, that's fair enough, things move on. But, just in case it makes a difference, I hope those involved won't mind me tagging the last 3 committers to verify I should find another approach? - @jaredpar @alexsorokoletov @davkean |
@kierenj indeed, I did not get any notifications on that project. I worked in a separate branch to run that thing using .NET Core but many dependencies are not yet there and there is some work to get them in. I guess this project is alive in a way that you can use it. Lack of development is probably because recent .NET Standard 2 release. |
@karelz also. |
This isn't a supported tool or product. It was a "hey we have a bunch of code that we are opening sourcing that has different code styles - let's fix that". Along the road we made changes as we open sourced more code. As we've stopped porting code - we stopped needing it as much. We wrote it to scratch an itch - that itch has been scratched, so no focus on it anymore. |
@davkean What we need to understand is the future of this repo/code/tool. Do we fork that repo and go there and contribute in a new place? Thank you |
FWIW, I wrote a 30-line powershell function that will convert a VS 2017 .csproj (including .NET core .csprojs) to a primitive VS 2015 .csproj, so codeformatter can still format my code. It's a hack and a half, but it works for my purposes. It's here: |
When I was looking for an automatic C# style formatter, my used search engine showed up this project quite at the top. I am glad I looked further: dotnet-format is probably the tool you should use today. |
Hi - just checking if this project is a good one to adopt for projects moving forward? Is there a roadmap for .NET Core support, etc? Thanks!
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