StyleCop Analyzers is configured using two separate mechanisms: code analysis rule set files, and stylecop.json.
-
Code analysis rule set files
- Enable and disable individual rules
- Configure the severity of violations reported by individual rules
-
stylecop.json
- Specify project-specific text, such as the name of the company and the structure to use for copyright headers
- Fine-tune the behavior of certain rules
Code analysis rule sets are the standard way to configure most diagnostic analyzers within Visual Studio 2015. Information about creating and customizing these files can be found in the Using Rule Sets to Group Code Analysis Rules documentation on MSDN.
The easiest way to add a stylecop.json configuration file to a new project is using a code fix provided by the project. To invoke the code fix, open any file where SA1633 is reported¹ and press Ctrl+. to bring up the Quick Fix menu. From the menu, select Add StyleCop settings file to the project.
A JSON schema is available for stylecop.json. By including a reference in stylecop.json to this schema, Visual Studio will offer IntelliSense functionality (code completion, quick info, etc.) while editing this file. The schema may be configured by adding the following top-level property in stylecop.json:
{
"$schema": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/DotNetAnalyzers/StyleCopAnalyzers/master/StyleCop.Analyzers/StyleCop.Analyzers/Settings/stylecop.schema.json"
}
💡 The code fix described previously automatically configures stylecop.json to reference the schema. If the schema appears to be out-of-date in Visual Studio, right click anywhere in the stylecop.json document and then select Reload Schemas.
For best results, stylecop.json should be included in source control. This will automatically propagate the expected settings to all team members working on the project.
⚠️ If you are working in Git, make sure your .gitignore file does not contain the following line. This line should be removed if present.[Ss]tyle[Cc]op.*
This section describes the indentation rules which can be configured in stylecop.json. Each of the described
properties are configured in the indentation
object, which is shown in the following sample file.
{
"settings": {
"indentation": {
}
}
}
The following properties are used to configure basic indentation in StyleCop Analyzers.
Property | Default Value | Summary |
---|---|---|
indentationSize |
4 | The number of columns to use for each indentation of code. Depending on the useTabs and tabSize settings, this will be filled with tabs and/or spaces. |
tabSize |
4 | The width of a hard tab character in source code. This value is used when converting between tabs and spaces. |
useTabs |
false | true to indent using hard tabs; otherwise, false to indent using spaces |
💡 When working in Visual Studio, the IDE will not automatically adjust editor settings according to the values in stylecop.json. To provide this functionality as well, we recommend duplicating the basic indentation settings in a .editorconfig file. Users of the EditorConfig extension for Visual Studio will no need to update their C# indentation settings in order to match your project style.
This section describes the features of spacing rules which can be configured in stylecop.json. Each of the described properties are configured in the spacingRules
object, which is shown in the following sample file.
{
"settings": {
"spacingRules": {
}
}
}
Currently there are no configurable settings for spacing rules.
This section describes the features of readability rules which can be configured in stylecop.json. Each of the described properties are configured in the readabilityRules
object, which is shown in the following sample file.
{
"settings": {
"readabilityRules": {
}
}
}
Currently there are no configurable settings for readability rules.
This section describes the features of ordering rules which can be configured in stylecop.json. Each of the described properties are configured in the orderingRules
object, which is shown in the following sample file.
{
"settings": {
"orderingRules": {
}
}
}
The following properties are used to configure element ordering in StyleCop Analyzers.
Property | Default Value | Summary |
---|---|---|
elementOrder |
[ "kind", "accessibility", "constant", "static", "readonly" ] |
Specifies the traits used for ordering elements within a document, along with their precedence |
The elementOrder
property is an array of element traits. The ordering rules (SA1201, SA1202, SA1203, SA1204, SA1214,
and SA1215) evaluate these traits in the order they are defined to identify ordering problems, and the code fix uses
this property when reordering code elements. Any traits which are omitted from the array are ignored. The following
traits are supported:
kind
: Elements are ordered according to their kind (see SA1201 for this predefined order)accessibility
: Elements are ordered according to their declared accessibility (see SA1202 for this predefined order)constant
: Constant elements are ordered before non-constant elementsstatic
: Static elements are ordered before non-static elementsreadonly
: Readonly elements are ordered before non-readonly elements
This configuration property allows for a wide variety of ordering configurations, as shown in the following examples.
The following example shows a customized element order where all constant fields are placed before non-constant fields, regardless of accessibility.
{
"settings": {
"orderingRules": {
"elementOrder": [
"kind",
"constant",
"accessibility",
"static",
"readonly"
]
}
}
}
The following example shows a customized element order where element accessibility is simply ignored, but other ordering rules remain enforced.
{
"settings": {
"orderingRules": {
"elementOrder": [
"kind",
"constant",
"static",
"readonly"
]
}
}
}
The following properties are used to configure using directives in StyleCop Analyzers.
Property | Default Value | Summary |
---|---|---|
systemUsingDirectivesFirst |
true | Specifies whether System using directives are placed before other using directives |
usingDirectivesPlacement |
"insideNamespace" |
Specifies the desired placement of using directives |
blankLinesBetweenUsingGroups |
"allow" |
Specifies is blank lines are required to separate groups of using statements |
The usingDirectivesPlacement
property affects the behavior of the following rules which report incorrectly placed
using directives.
⚠️ Use of certain features, including but not limited to preprocessor directives, may cause the using directives code fix to not relocate using directives automatically. If SA1200 is still reported after applying the Fix All operation for using directives, the remaining cases will need to be resolved manually.
This property has three allowed values, which are described as follows.
In this mode, using directives should be placed inside of namespace declarations. This is the default mode, and adheres to the original SA1200 behavior from StyleCop Classic.
- SA1200 reports using directives which are located outside of a namespace declaration (a few exceptions exist for cases where this is required)
- Using directives code fix moves using directives inside of namespace declarations where possible
In this mode, using directives should be placed outside of namespace declarations.
- SA1200 reports using directives which are located inside of a namespace declaration
- Using directives code fix moves using directives outside of namespace declarations where possible
In this mode, using directives may be placed inside or outside of namespaces.
- SA1200 does not report any violations
- Using directives code fix may reorder using directives, but does not relocate them
The blankLinesBetweenUsingGroups
property affects the behavior of the following rules which report the presence / absence
of blanks lines between groups of using directives.
Using directives can grouped based on the purpose of the using directive. StyleCop Analyzers recognizes the following using directive group types:
- System using directives (only when
systemUsingDirectivesFirst
is true) - Normal using directives
- Static using directives
- Alias using directives
This property has three allowed values, which are described as follows.
In this mode, a blank line between groups for using directives is optional.
- No diagnostic will be produced.
- Using directives code fix will not insert blank lines.
In this mode, a blank line between groups for using directives is mandatory.
- SA1516 reports missing blank lines between using directive groups.
- Using directives code fix will insert blank lines.
- SA1516 code fix will add a missing blank line.
In this mode, a blank line between groups for using directives is not allowed.
- SA1516 reports blank lines between using directive groups.
- Using directives code fix will not insert blank lines.
- SA1516 code fix will remove blank lines between using directive groups.
This section describes the features of naming rules which can be configured in stylecop.json. Each of the described properties are configured in the namingRules
object, which is shown in the following sample file.
{
"settings": {
"namingRules": {
}
}
}
The following properties are used to configure allowable Hungarian notation prefixes in StyleCop Analyzers.
Property | Default Value | Summary |
---|---|---|
allowCommonHungarianPrefixes |
true | Specifies whether common non-Hungarian notation prefixes should be allowed. When true, the two-letter words 'as', 'at', 'by', 'do', 'go', 'if', 'in', 'is', 'it', 'no', 'of', 'on', 'or', and 'to' are allowed to appear as prefixes for variable names. |
allowedHungarianPrefixes |
[ ] |
Specifies additional prefixes which are allowed to be used in variable names. See the example below for more information. |
The following example shows a settings file which allows the common prefixes as well as the custom prefixes 'md' and 'cd'.
{
"settings": {
"namingRules": {
"allowedHungarianPrefixes": [
"cd",
"md"
]
}
}
}
This section describes the features of maintainability rules which can be configured in stylecop.json. Each of the described properties are configured in the maintainabilityRules
object, which is shown in the following sample file.
{
"settings": {
"maintainabilityRules": {
}
}
}
The following properties are used to configure maintainability rules in StyleCop Analyzers.
Property | Default Value | Summary |
---|---|---|
topLevelTypes |
[ "class" ] |
Specifies which kind of types that must be placed in separate files |
The topLevelTypes
property is an array which specifies which kind of types that must be placed in separate files
according to rule SA1402. The following types are supported:
class
interface
struct
enum
delegate
This section describes the features of layout rules which can be configured in stylecop.json. Each of the described properties are configured in the layoutRules
object, which is shown in the following sample file.
{
"settings": {
"layoutRules": {
}
}
}
The following properties are used to configure layout rules in StyleCop Analyzers.
Property | Default Value | Summary |
---|---|---|
newlineAtEndOfFile |
"allow" |
Specifies the handling for newline characters which appear at the end of a file |
allowConsecutiveUsings |
true |
Specifies if SA1519 will allow consecutive using statements without braces |
The behavior of SA1518 can be customized regarding the manner in which newline characters at the end of a
file are handled. The newlineAtEndOfFile
property supports the following values:
"allow"
: Files are allowed to end with a single newline character, but it is not required"require"
: Files are required to end with a single newline character"omit"
: Files may not end with a newline character
The behavior of SA1519 can be customized regarding the manner in which consecutive using statements without braces are treated.
The allowConsecutiveUsings
property specifies the behavior:
true
: consecutive using statements without braces will not produce diagnosticsfalse
: consecutive using statements without braces will produce a SA1519 diagnostic
This only allows omitting the braces for a using followed by another using statement. A using statement followed by any other type of statement will still require braces to used.
This section describes the features of documentation rules which can be configured in stylecop.json. Each of the described properties are configured in the documentationRules
object, which is shown in the following sample file.
{
"settings": {
"documentationRules": {
}
}
}
The following properties are used to configure copyright headers in StyleCop Analyzers.
Property | Default Value | Summary |
---|---|---|
companyName |
"PlaceholderCompany" |
Specifies the company name which should appear in copyright notices |
copyrightText |
"Copyright (c) {companyName}. All rights reserved." |
Specifies the default copyright text which should appear in copyright headers |
xmlHeader |
true | Specifies whether file headers should use standard StyleCop XML format, where the copyright notice is wrapped in a <copyright> element |
variables |
n/a | Specifies replacement variables which can be referenced in the copyrightText value |
headerDecoration |
n/a | This value can be set to add a decoration for the header comment so headers look similar to the ones generated by the StyleCop Classic ReSharper fix |
In order to successfully use StyleCop-checked file headers, most projects will need to configure the companyName
property.
The
companyName
property is so frequently customized that it is included in the default stylecop.json file produced by the code fix.
The copyrightText
property is a string which may contain placeholders. Each placeholder has the form {variable}
,
where variable
is either a built-in variable (see below), or the name of a property in the variables
property. The
following sample file shows a custom stylecop.json file which references both companyName
and two custom variables
within the copyrightText
.
{
"settings": {
"documentationRules": {
"companyName": "FooCorp",
"copyrightText": "Copyright (c) {companyName}. All rights reserved.\nLicensed under the {licenseName} license. See {licenseFile} file in the project root for full license information.",
"variables": {
"licenseName": "MIT",
"licenseFile": "LICENSE"
}
}
}
}
With the above configuration, a file TypeName.cs would be expected to have the following header.
// <copyright file="TypeName.cs" company="FooCorp">
// Copyright (c) FooCorp. All rights reserved.
// Licensed under the MIT license. See LICENSE file in the project root for full license information.
// </copyright>
Variable | Meaning |
---|---|
companyName |
The value of the companyName configuration property in stylecop.json |
fileName |
The file name of the current source file |
📝 If a
fileName
variable is explicitly included within thevariables
property of stylecop.json, that value will be used instead of the name of the current source file.
When the xmlHeader
property is true (the default), StyleCop Analyzers expects file headers to conform to the following standard StyleCop format.
// <copyright file="{fileName}" company="{companyName}">
// {copyrightText}
// </copyright>
When the xmlHeader
property is explicitly set to false, StyleCop Analyzers expects file headers to conform to the following customizable format.
// {copyrightText}
The headerDecoration
property is a string which can contain text that's used for decorating the generated header so
headers look similar to the ones generated by the StyleCop Classic ReSharper fix.
The default value for the headerDecoration
property is empty, so no decoration will be added.
📝 The header decoration is not checked, it's only used for fixing the header.
{
"settings": {
"documentationRules": {
"companyName": "FooCorp",
"copyrightText": "Copyright (c) {companyName}. All rights reserved.",
"headerDecoration": "-----------------------------------------------------------------------"
}
}
}
With the above configuration, the fix for a file TypeName.cs would look like the following.
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
// <copyright file="TypeName.cs" company="FooCorp">
// Copyright (c) FooCorp. All rights reserved.
// </copyright>
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
StyleCop Analyzers includes rules which require developers to document the majority of a code base by default. This requirement can easily overwhelm a team which did not use StyleCop for the entire development process. To help guide developers towards a properly documented code base, several properties are available in stylecop.json to progressively increase the documentation requirements.
Property | Default Value | Summary |
---|---|---|
documentInterfaces |
true | Specifies whether interface members need to be documented. When true, all interface members require documentation, regardless of accessibility. |
documentExposedElements |
true | Specifies whether exposed elements need to be documented. When true, all publicly-exposed types and members require documentation. |
documentInternalElements |
true | Specifies whether internal elements need to be documented. When true, all internally-exposed types and members require documentation. |
documentPrivateElements |
false | Specifies whether private elements need to be documented. When true, all types and members except for declared private fields require documentation. |
documentPrivateFields |
false | Specifies whether private fields need to be documented. When true, all fields require documentation, regardless of accessibility. |
These properties affect the behavior of the following rules which report missing documentation. Rules which report incorrect or incomplete documentation continue to apply to all documentation comments in the code.
- SA1600 Elements must be documented
- SA1601 Partial elements must be documented
- SA1602 Enumeration items must be documented
The following example shows a configuration file which requires developers to document all publicly-accessible members and all interfaces (regardless of accessibility), but does not require other internal or private members to be documented.
📝 Documenting interfaces is a low-effort task compared to documenting an entire code base, but provides high value in the fact that it covers the sections of code most likely to impact cross-team usage scenarios.
{
"settings": {
"documentationRules": {
"documentInterfaces": true,
"documentInternalMembers": false
}
}
}
Some documentation rules require summary texts to start with specific strings. To allow teams to document their code in their native language, stylecop.json contains the documentationCulture
property.
Property | Default Value | Summary |
---|---|---|
documentationCulture |
"en-US" |
Specifies the culture or language to be used for certain documentation texts. |
This property affects the behavior of the following rules which report incorrect documentation.
- SA1623 Property summary documentation must match accessors
- SA1624 Property summary documentation must omit set accessor with restricted access
- SA1642 Constructor summary documentation must begin with standard text
- SA1643 Destructor summary documentation must begin with standard text
📝 The default value for
documentationCulture
is fixed instead of reflecting the user's system language. This is to ensure that different developers working on the same project always use the same value.
The following values are currently supported. Unsupported values will automatically fall back to the default value.
"de-DE"
"en-GB"
"en-US"
"es-MX"
"fr-FR"
"pl-PL"
"pt-BR"
"ru-RU"
{
"settings": {
"documentationRules": {
"documentationCulture": "de-DE"
}
}
}
The fileNamingConvention
property will determine how the SA1649 File name must match type name analyzer will check file names.
Given the following code:
public class Class1<T1, T2, T3>
{
}
The analyzer will expect file names according the table below. When the fileNamingConvention
property is not set, the stylecop
convention is used as default.
File naming convention | Expected file name |
---|---|
stylecop | Class1{T1,T2,T3}.cs |
metadata | Class1`3.cs |