![]() If you see me at TechEd, holler at me and I'll give you a demo. It was the only choice for programmers for a long time. ![]() It's also part of Rider, so it's super easy to switch between VS + ReSharper and Rider. for these guys, but seriously, it's pure sex. Provides more features than Visual Assist, especially when it comes to code navigation and refactoring. It takes a little while to get use to, and I need to make a cheat sheet to keep track of the shortcuts, but I'm digging it EVERY SINGLE DAY. The Linked Identifiers are crazy useful.You literally have to see it to believe it. It's easily extensible by a code plugin model OR standard Regular Expressions. ![]() It's radically customizable (almost to a fault).On the other hand, CodeRush is continuing to blow me away. It doesn't support a very wide range of refactorings, and it doesn't appear to glean a lot from the context of the current cursor position.įrankly, it looks like a Java program (wonder why? ) ) and just doesn't fit in Visual Studio.NET.It's context menus are far to deep to be useful.It looks lousy at ANY "unusual" font size (Lucida Console 14pt Bold).It feels VERY unpolished, and there's just no excuse for lack of polish these days.Now everyone is talking about ReSharper, and forgive me, but I'm just not feeling it. I know they disappeared and screwed some folks over, but it was a nice solid offering. ![]() Can someone explain to me the big deal about ReSharper? Sure, I tried Refactory and I dug it.
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