﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Ayende @ Rahien</title><link>http://ayende.com</link><description>Ayende @ Rahien</description><copyright>Copyright (C) Ayende Rahien  2004 - 2021 (c) 2026</copyright><ttl>60</ttl><item><title>Frank Quednau commented on Ode to ReSharper</title><description>Take the suggestion, take it :)
</description><link>http://ayende.com/3969/ode-to-resharper#comment7</link><guid>http://ayende.com/3969/ode-to-resharper#comment7</guid><pubDate>Thu, 23 Apr 2009 07:20:37 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>wmchristoe commented on Ode to ReSharper</title><description>I don't know about earlier versions of Resharper, but with version 4.5, you can have multiple naming convention rules for any given element.  For instance, I use both UpperCamelCase (not sure about this rule name) and lower_case conventions for method names to avoid the exact message that you show here, Oren.
</description><link>http://ayende.com/3969/ode-to-resharper#comment6</link><guid>http://ayende.com/3969/ode-to-resharper#comment6</guid><pubDate>Thu, 23 Apr 2009 00:39:27 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>cbp commented on Ode to ReSharper</title><description>For suggestions that you don't always like to follow but would still like to know about, you can change the blue squiggly underlines to a smaller, less prominent line that won't be highlighted in the sidebar:
  
Resharper-&gt;Options-&gt;-&gt;Inspection Severity
  
Change "Show as hint"
</description><link>http://ayende.com/3969/ode-to-resharper#comment5</link><guid>http://ayende.com/3969/ode-to-resharper#comment5</guid><pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2009 23:43:10 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Neil Mosafi commented on Ode to ReSharper</title><description>Yeah I noticed the underscore complaints... you can suppress it with a comment:
  
  
// ReSharper disable InconsistentNaming
  
  
I put that at the top of my specs which does the trick
</description><link>http://ayende.com/3969/ode-to-resharper#comment4</link><guid>http://ayende.com/3969/ode-to-resharper#comment4</guid><pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2009 22:20:42 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Kyle Baley commented on Ode to ReSharper</title><description>In the Naming styles, you can configure it to recognize method names with underscores. There are two options: all_lower and First_upper. As far as I can tell, you can't have it recognize one or the other on a class by class basis but you can tell it to recognize both styles (UpperCamelCase and First_upper) globally.
</description><link>http://ayende.com/3969/ode-to-resharper#comment3</link><guid>http://ayende.com/3969/ode-to-resharper#comment3</guid><pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2009 18:45:21 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>josh commented on Ode to ReSharper</title><description>cool. personally still not on the R# boat though because my only experience installing it messed up all my key bindings and i've been cross with it ever since. I'm a keyboard guy; I can't live without my keybindings being right.
  
  
I suppose I should probably try it again.
</description><link>http://ayende.com/3969/ode-to-resharper#comment2</link><guid>http://ayende.com/3969/ode-to-resharper#comment2</guid><pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2009 18:41:28 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Arne Claassen commented on Ode to ReSharper</title><description>Heh, I just ran into that second rule last night, since i also write my tests using the underscore notation. I was torn for a second, since I am well trained by ReSharper to follow their advice, but i think i'll just have to live with blue squigglies in my tests. Unless there is a way to disable rules on a per project basis in the same solution
</description><link>http://ayende.com/3969/ode-to-resharper#comment1</link><guid>http://ayende.com/3969/ode-to-resharper#comment1</guid><pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2009 18:01:30 GMT</pubDate></item></channel></rss>