You can. I've used it extensively on the 4.0 branch. painful for any
Javascript coding or projects, but it has been extremely helpful with
writing C# code and testing.

On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 2:23 AM, Prescott Nasser <geobmx...@hotmail.com>wrote:

>
> fyi, I believe you can request a free resharper license for being an
> active committer to an open source project (ie Lucene.Net).
>
>
>
> ---------------------------------------- > Date: Mon, 23 Jan 2012 23:20:25
> -0800 > From: currens.ch...@gmail.com > To:
> lucene-net-...@lucene.apache.org > Subject: [Lucene.Net] Coding Standards
> > > All, > > I just wanted to confirm everyone's stance on the coding
> guidelines > listed in the wiki. >
> https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/LUCENENET/Coding+Guidelines >
> > Are these the official guidelines we are using? If they are, has > anyone
> who has Resharper already created rules so others don't have > to? I
> believe that these are the exact rules used in StyleCop, so > people
> without Resharper can use those rules to test the code before > check-in,
> so we may not need to have a ruleset for those who just want > to use the
> stylecop plugin. > > There are things I like and dislike about the
> Microsoft Design > Standards, specifically, I prefer private variables to
> start with an > underscore for easy identification. Either way, making sure
> there's a > ruleset will be helpful for other people when using tools to
> conform > to the standards. > > > Thanks, > Christopher
>

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