StyleCop
Static program analysis software From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
StyleCop is an open-source static code analysis tool from Microsoft[1] that checks C# code for conformance to StyleCop's recommended coding styles and a subset of Microsoft's .NET Framework Design Guidelines. StyleCop analyses the source code, allowing it to enforce a different set of rules from FxCop (which, instead of source code, checks .NET managed code assemblies).[2][3] The rules are classified into the following categories:
- Documentation
- Layout
- Maintainability
- Naming
- Ordering
- Readability
- Spacing
Original author(s) | Microsoft |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Jason Allor, Andy Reeves, Chris Dahlberg |
Stable release | 5.0.6329.1
/ April 30, 2017 |
Repository | github |
Written in | C# |
Operating system | Microsoft Windows |
Platform | .NET Framework |
Type | Static code analysis tool |
License | Microsoft Public Licence |
Website | github |
StyleCop includes both GUI and command-line versions of the tool. It is possible to add new rules to be applied.
StyleCop was originally developed by Jason Allor as a Microsoft internal tool, and was released externally as an open-source project in April 2010 on CodePlex.
StyleCop 4.7.55 (November 10, 2016) is compatible with Visual Studio 2008, 2010, 2012, 2013, and 2015.[4] (Microsoft Visual Studio Extension)
StyleCop began a move to GitHub in December 2014,[5] and the last change applied to the CodePlex edition was November 11, 2016.[6]
StyleCop 5.0.6329.1 (April 30, 2017) works with Visual Studio 2012, 2013, 2015, and 2017.[7] (Windows Installer)
Development is stopping. A named successor is StyleCopAnalyzers, for Visual Studio 2015 and later.[8]
See also
References
External links
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