10/05/2017

.NET Developer Days 2017

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In the post .NET Developer Days 2016 - Grand finale I wrote that it hadn't been my last my last .NET Developer Days conference. Recently, I've been asked again to become a media partner of this year's edition so I agreed without much hesitation. Disclaimer: It also means that it is a sponsored text.

The well known aphorism says that perfect is the enemy of good. The organizers of the conference must have heard that because the form of the current edition will be similar to the previous one i.e.:
  • What: 3 tracks with session about different topics and of different difficulties.
  • Where: EXPO XXI Exhibition Center – Warsaw, Prądzyńskiego 12/14
  • When: 18th-20th October 2017. 18th October is reserved for full-day training sessions (so called pre-conf) and the actual conference will start on 19th October.
  • Language: 100% English
The agenda has not been published yet and we have to wait until June. However, the last time the range of topics was wide and I didn't have any problem to find something interesting from my perspective. I keep my fingers crossed this year will not be worse. What is very important the earlier you buy tickets the less you will pay. If you are interested do not think too much. The current price for the conference without pre-conf is 275€. In June 325€ it will be and in August 375€.

28/04/2017

The best and the worst thing when doing science

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A few months ago, I returned (partially) to the university. I'm working in the project in the field of the computer vision for Google company. The project is related to Google Tango technology and is really interesting. However, within these few months there were also moments when I was really fed up. The same happened when I was doing Ph.D. so I started thinking what I like the most in doing science and what I don't like.

20/04/2017

How I removed 50% of the code

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Title: Azuleyo tiles somewhere in Portugal, Source: own resources, Authors: Agnieszka and Michał Komorowscy


My last 2 posts were about problems with using Roslyn. Nonetheless, even if I sometime hate it, I'm still using it so the time has come to show some practical example of using Roslyn. Recently, I've been working on the task that can be summed up as: Take this ugly code and do something with it. i.e. more or less the refactoring task.

Now I'll give you some intuition of what I have to deal with. The code that I have to refactor was generated automatically based on XML schema. These were actually DTO classes used to communicate with the external service. Here are some statistics:
  • 28.7 thousands lines of code in 23 files.
  • 2200 classes and 920 enums.
  • Many classes and enums seems to me identical or very similar.

10/04/2017

Why I hate Roslyn even more

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In my previous post I wrote about my problem with "empty" projects and Roslyn. The symptom was that in some cases according to Roslyn my C# projects didn't contain any files. For quite a long time, I haven't been able to find a solution. Especially because I couldn't reproduce problem on my local machine. Fortunately, today I noticed exactly the same problem on another computer.

29/03/2017

Why I hate Roslyn

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The more I work with Roslyn the more I appreciate the possibilities it gives and the more I hate it. And I hate it for the same thing as many other projects I worked with in the past. What is it? Well, I like when a system fails fast, fails loudly and fails in the clear way. Unfortunately, Roslyn can do something completely different what sometimes makes working with it the pain in ass. I'll give you some examples.

Issue 1 - Problem with "empty" projects

Here is the code that shows how I usually process documents/files for a given project. It's pretty easy.
var workspace = MSBuildWorkspace.Create();

var sln = await workspace.OpenSolutionAsync(path);
     
foreach (var projectId in sln.ProjectIds)
{
   var project = sln.GetProject(projectId);

   foreach (var documentId in project.DocumentIds)
   {
      // Process a document
   }
}
It works quite well but only on my machine :) On 2 other machines I'm observing problems. In general I have an example solution with 2 test projects. One is WPF application and the another is WebAPI.

The problem is that on some machines I can only read and analyze WPF application. If I try to do exactly the same thing with WebAPI application, then the project loaded by Roslyn is empty i.e. contains no documents (DocumentIds property is empty)! I've already tried to load this project in a different way but without success.

To be honest currently I'm stuck and I have no idea what is wrong here. Any suggestions?

Issue 2 - the semantic analysis does not work

With Roslyn we can perfrom the syntax analysis and the semantic analysis of the code. The syntax analysis, with a syntaxt tree, allows you to only see a structure of a program. The semantic analysis is more powerfull and allows you to understand more. For example, having a code like that:

SomeClass x;

With the semantic analysis you can check that SomeClass is defined within SomeNamespace and has X members (methods, properties). For example, here we have a code showing how to use the semantic analysis to check what interfaces are implemented by a given class at any level of the inheritance.
var compilation = await project.GetCompilationAsync();

foreach (var documentId in project.DocumentIds)
{
   var document = project.GetDocument(documentId);

   // Get a syntax tree
   var tree = await document.GetSyntaxTreeAsync(); 

   // Get a root of the syntax tree
   var root = await tree.GetRootAsync(); 
   
   // Find a node of the syntaxt tree for a first class in a file/document
   var classNode= root.DescendantNodes().OfType<ClassDeclarationSyntax>().FirstOrDefault(); 

   if(classNode== null) continue;

   // Get a semantic model for the syntax tree
   var semanticModel = compilation.GetSemanticModel(tree); 

   // Use the semantic model to get symbol info for the found class node
   var symbol = semanticModel.GetDeclaredSymbol(classNode); 

   // Check what inerfaces are implemnted by the class at any level
   foreach(var @interface in symbol.AllInterfaces)  
   {
      // ...
   }
}
If you run this code as it is, it again will not throw any exceptions. However, you'll noticed that any found class doesn't implement any interface according to Roslyn. Where is the problem this time?

It's quite obvious if you know that. To perform the semantic analysis Roslyn needs to analyse assemblies used by the project. However, it's not enough to compile the project. You have to explicitly register all required assemblies. I do it in the easy way. I simply register all assemblies found in the output folder.
var compilation = await project.GetCompilationAsync();

// Let's register mscorlib
compilation = compilation.AddReferences(MetadataReference.CreateFromFile(typeof(object).Assembly.Location));

if (Directory.Exists("PATH TO OUTPUT DIRECTORY"))
{
   var files = Directory.GetFiles(directory, "*.dll").ToList(); // You can also look for *.exe files

   foreach (var f in files)
      compilation = compilation.AddReferences(MetadataReference.CreateFromFile(f));
}
And again if the semantic analysis can not be performed without that why no exception is thrown?

Issue 3 - Problem with reading projects/solutions

This one I've already described in more details in the post about Roslyn and unit tests. The problem was that:
  • MSBuildWorkspace.OpenSolutionAsync method was returning an empty solution if a particular assembly was missing (not fast, not loud)
  • MSBuildWorkspace.OpenProjectAsync method was returning the error The language 'C#' is not supported (not in the clear way).
These issues were caused by a missing assembly i.e. Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.CSharp.Workspaces.dll. However, wouldn't it be easier to just throw an exception saying that it is missing. Or at least saying that it was not possible to find assembly responsible for reading C# projects and solutions.


Remember failing fast, loudly and in the clear way does not cost much but can save a lot of time.


*The picture at the beginning of the post comes from own resources and shows cliffs near Cabo da Roca - the westernmost extent of mainland Portugal.