Does anyone know of any free add-in similar to Smart Paster, but for Visual Studio 2010?
Unfortunately, Smart Paster only works for VS2005 and VS2008.
For the ones that don't know what I'm talking about, check it out.
Does anyone know of any free add-in similar to Smart Paster, but for Visual Studio 2010?
Unfortunately, Smart Paster only works for VS2005 and VS2008.
For the ones that don't know what I'm talking about, check it out.
My simplified (C# only) version for 2010 is here The post explains the VS2010 incompatibility (CommandBarButton.FaceId throws an exception) so you can change the VS2008 source code if you want.
Smart Paster Makes Life Easier You don't have to pay for everything you want. There are a lot of free tools out there that will may your life better. Obviously, when I get a free tool I don't look at the price. What I do look for is useful functionality, simple installation, a quick start and whether the tool fits with the way I work. I find that I'm more willing ignore "fit and finish" issues with a free tool.
Smart Paster is a good example. It's a tool that I use a lot. I'm constantly pasting strings into my programs and formatting them to work as string values. For C# this means breaking long strings up to concatenate them together and adding the @ prefix. Smart Paster adds a Paste As... option to the popup menu when you right mouse click in an editor window. If you pick the String choice in a C# file, this is what you get:
@"Smart Paster is a good example. " + @"It's a tool that I use a lot. " In Visual Basic you get the line continuation characters:
"Smart Paster is a good example. " & _ "It's a tool that I use a lot. " You can customize how long your strings will be.
But wait, there's more! The other paste operation I do with strings is to create a StringBuilder. There's a menu choice for that, too. When you do a StringBuilder paste, you need to provide the name of your variable and this is what you get:
Dim sbArticleText As New StringBuilder(421) sbArticleText.AppendFormat("Smart Paster is a good example.") sbArticleText.AppendFormat("It's a tool hat I use a lot") The tool even handles escaping embedded quotes. What are my complaints? A minor one: The choices that I use are on a submenu and I wish they were directly on the popup menu. A second minor complaint: I wish that double quotes were handled by replacing them with single quotes -- it would make it easier to paste XML into string constants.
My biggest issue is installing the package. The Visual Studio 2008 version is only available as source code and comes without installation instructions. Get your version here, which provides a compiled version and instructions on how to install it (you have to extract a zip file to the right place). This is one of those "fit and finish" issues that I'm willing to overlook in a free tool.
You can also paste into a Region and as a comment but I've never used them.