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dotnet-format
is a code formatter for dotnet
that applies style preferences to a project or solution. Preferences will be read from an .editorconfig
file, if present, otherwise a default set of preferences will be used. At this time dotnet-format
is able to format C# and Visual Basic projects with a subset of supported .editorconfig options.
dotnet-format is now part of the .NET 6 SDK. Invoking the dotnet format
command will fix whitespace, code style, and analyzer issues by default. dotnet-format will look in the current directory for a project or solution file and use that as the workspace to format. If more than one project or solution file is present in the current directory, you will need to specify the workspace to format. You can control how verbose the output will be by using the --verbosity
option.
There are also 3 subcommands to target specific scenarios:
dotnet format whitespace
: fixes whitespacedotnet format style
: runs code style analyzersdotnet format analyzers
: runs third party analyzers
--no-restore
: Doesn't execute an implicit restore before formatting.--include-generated
: Format files generated by the SDK--include
: A list of relative file or folder paths to include in formatting. All files are formatted if empty.--exclude
: A list of relative file or folder paths to exclude from formatting.--verbosity
: Set the verbosity level. Allowed values are q[uiet], m[inimal], n[ormal], d[etailed], and diag[nostic]--report
: Accepts a file path, which if provided, will produce a json report in the given directory.--binarylog
: Log all project or solution load information to a binary log file.--verify-no-changes
: Verify no formatting changes would be performed. Terminates with a non-zero exit code if any files would have been formatted.
--diagnostics
: A space separated list of diagnostic ids to use as a filter when fixing code style or 3rd party issues.--severity
: The severity of diagnostics to fix. Allowed values are info, warn, and error.
Note: if the user specifies a severity here it is used for both style and analyzers.
--folder
: Whether to treat the workspace argument as a simple folder of files.
--diagnostics
: A space separated list of diagnostic ids to use as a filter when fixing code style or 3rd party issues.--severity
: The severity of diagnostics to fix. Allowed values are info, warn, and error.
--diagnostics
: A space separated list of diagnostic ids to use as a filter when fixing code style or 3rd party issues.--severity
: The severity of diagnostics to fix. Allowed values are info, warn, and error.
Add format
after dotnet
and before the command arguments that you want to run:
Examples | Description |
---|---|
dotnet format |
Formats and runs analysis for the project or solution in the current directory. |
dotnet format -v diag |
Formats and runs analysis with very verbose logging. |
dotnet format <workspace> |
Formats and runs analysis for a specific project or solution. |
dotnet format <workspace> --severity error |
Formats, fixes codestyle errors, and fixes 3rd party analyzer errors. |
dotnet format whitespace <workspace> --folder |
Formats a particular folder and subfolders. |
dotnet format style <workspace> |
Fixes only codestyle analyzer warnings. |
dotnet format style <workspace> --severity error --no-restore |
Fixes only codestyle analyzer errors without performing an implicit restore. |
dotnet format style <workspace> --diagnostics IDE0005 |
Fixes only codestyle analyzer warnings for the IDE0005 diagnostic. |
dotnet format analyzers <workspace> --severity error |
Fixes only 3rd party analyzer errors. |
dotnet format --include Program.cs Utility\Logging.cs |
Formats the files Program.cs and Utility\Logging.cs |
dotnet format --verify-no-changes |
Formats but does not save. Returns a non-zero exit code if any files would have been changed. |
dotnet format --report <report-path> |
Formats and saves a json report file to the given directory. |
dotnet format --include test/Utilities/*.cs --folder |
Formats the files expanded from native shell globbing (e.g. bash). Space-separated list of files are fed to formatter in this case. Also applies to --exclude option. |
dotnet format --include 'test/Utilities/*.cs' --folder |
With single quotes, formats the files expanded from built-in glob expansion. A single file pattern is fed to formatter, which gets expanded internally. Also applies to --exclude option. |
ls tests/Utilities/*.cs | dotnet format --include - --folder |
Formats the list of files redirected from pipeline via standard input. Formatter will iterate over Console.In to read the list of files. Also applies to --exclude option. |
Development builds of dotnet-format
are being hosted on Azure Packages.
Note: After installing .NET 6 Preview 7 SDK or higher you will need to run the dotnet-format global tool by invoking dotnet-format
. Invoking dotnet format
will invoke the SDK's copy of dotnet-format.
You can install the latest build of the tool using the following command.
dotnet tool install -g dotnet-format --version "8.*" --add-source https://pkgs.dev.azure.com/dnceng/public/_packaging/dotnet8/nuget/v3/index.json
You can install a specific build of the tool using the following command. Be sure to update the version string to match the intended version.
dotnet tool install -g dotnet-format --version "8.0.446201" --add-source https://pkgs.dev.azure.com/dnceng/public/_packaging/dotnet8/nuget/v3/index.json
You can visit the dotnet8 feed for a full list of versions.
Visit the dotnet7 feed or dotnet6 feed instead. Be sure to use the source URL appropriate for the version that you are installing.
You can build and package the tool using the following commands. The instructions assume that you are in the root of the repository.
build -pack
# The final line from the build will read something like
# Successfully created package '..\artifacts\packages\Debug\Shipping\dotnet-format.8.0.0-dev.nupkg'.
# Use the value that is in the form `8.0.0-dev` as the version in the next command.
dotnet tool install --add-source .\artifacts\packages\Debug\Shipping -g dotnet-format --version <version>
dotnet format
Note: On macOS and Linux,
.\artifacts
will need be switched to./artifacts
to accommodate for the different slash directions.
You can uninstall the tool using the following command.
dotnet tool uninstall -g dotnet-format