I cant work without resharper. But thats not really convincing.. I know ages back Resharper only had one set of keyboard mappings. I think it was the IntelliJ settings.. They now by default let you pick either Visual Studio keyboard settings or IntelliJ Settings.
The visual studio keys should work well with the standard visual studio keyboard mappings. Of course you can still totally map then via the Visual studio configuration settings. Of course the best way to see if its worth it is try it for 30 days and see. Your personal preferences may differ highly from mine. If you'r running vs2010 try the EAP 5.0 nightlys they are reasonable stable (more stable than VS2010 IMHO) and give you a bunch of new goodstuff (MVC2 support, loop->linq refeactor) Other options you have for IDE enhancements are CodeItRIght, CodeRush, Telerik JustCode and a few others... On Mon, Feb 1, 2010 at 10:07 AM, Greg Keogh <[email protected]> wrote: > Folks, a few years ago I tried ReSharper (dunno what version), but I > found it so “aggressive” in altering my keystrokes and the editing behaviour > that it drove me mad and I gave up on it. At the time I wished for some kind > of “ReSharper Lite”. Over the Silverlight Code Camp weekend I saw a few > people using the latest version, and it seems to be much more pleasant > experience with lots of nifty new features. I also hear people making > passing comments about how much they like it. > > > > I’d like to hear from anyone who can convince me that the $US199 price tag > for a personal licence is really worth it. Does ReSharper REALLY make you > more productive in your day to day coding. In a nutshell, what are the > features that you love the most? Can I configure it to prevent hijacking all > of my familiar keystrokes, or should I not do that and learn to live with > it? Any bad points or learning difficulties? Is it stable? > > > > I use FxCop, but people were talking about StyleCop last week, and I notice > there’s a ReSharper plugin for it. It looks like it’s rules are so strict > that they’d drive you insane. Does it? Or perhaps it can be configured to be > less intrusive to the level you like. > > > > Greg > > >
