Book Image

Visual Studio 2010 Best Practices

By : Peter Ritchie
Book Image

Visual Studio 2010 Best Practices

By: Peter Ritchie

Overview of this book

When you are developing on the Microsoft platform, Visual Studio 2010 offers you a range of powerful tools and makes the whole process easier and faster. After learning it, if you are think that you can sit back and relax, you cannot be further away from truth. To beat the crowd, you need to be better than others, learn tips and tricks that other don't know yet. This book is a compilation of the best practices of programming with Visual Studio. Visual Studio 2010 best practices will take you through the practices that you need to master programming with .NET Framework. The book goes on to detail several practices involving many aspects of software development with Visual Studio. These practices include debugging and exception handling and design. It details building and maintaining a recommended practices library and the criteria by which to document recommended practices The book begins with practices on source code control (SCC). It includes different types of SCC and discusses how to choose them based on different scenarios. Advanced syntax in C# is then covered with practices covering generics, iterator methods, lambdas, and closures. The next set of practices focus on deployment as well as creating MSI deployments with Windows Installer XML (WiX)óincluding Windows applications and services. The book then takes you through practices for developing with WCF and Web Service. The software development lifecycle is completed with practices on testing like project structure, naming, and the different types of automated tests. Topics like test coverage, continuous testing and deployment, and mocking are included. Although this book uses Visual Studio as example, you can use these practices with any IDE.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Visual Studio 2010 Best Practices
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Branching strategies


We've talked about branching briefly: what it is and what it's for. Let's now talk about how to use it. Branching provides isolation. A branch isolates changes to source code from other changes (not just "other's changes") to source code. Once branched code is worked on in isolation, changes are then merged back into the parent branch (or the trunk if that's the parent branch). This can be visualized with the following diagram:

While the branch may have been merged back into the trunk, work could continue on that branch and, presumably, merged back into the trunk again at a later date. There are a few reasons why you'd want to have that isolation.

Isolation

In the most general sense, there are various reasons to isolate certain changes to source code from other changes to source code. Dependent code requires dependencies to have a certain degree of stability. When code is being modified or redesigned you can no longer guarantee that stability and risk breaking the dependent...