Is it possible to tell Visual Studio not to treat a source file as a "component"? [duplicate]
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Is there an attribute I can add to a class so it will be edited as code, not in the designer?
Class with System.ComponentModel.Component
on their inheritance path are automatically treated as "components" within Visual Studio (2008), triggering a different icon for the source file:
While the icon does not really matter, the changed double click behavior is really annoying: instead of opening the source code in the text editor, Visual Studio now shows a screen encouraging me to add components to my class by dragging them "from the Toolbox". I do not want to do that!
I am aware that I can right click the source file and choose "View Code", but whenever I forget to do this, I am stuck waiting for a dialog which is absolutely useless. Is there any way to disable the component behavior (preferably in the source code)?
Can't you use the DesignerCategory
attribute to decorate your class ?
When decorating your class with this attribute like displayed below, the file should open in 'code view' when you double click it:
[System.ComponentModel.DesignerCategory("Code")]
public class MyComponent
{
}
As OregonGhost already mentioned in his comment this also happens if you make a partial class file from a form.
The problem is even more worse. If you take a look into your project file you can find entries for every file include like this:
<Compile Include="FormMain.cs">
<SubType>Form</SubType>
</Compile>
So the solution should be to delete the line <SubType>...</SubType>
cause it seems to be the root of all the problems. But if you delete this line, save the file, open it in Visual Studio, save it again and take a look again into, the line will reappear!
There seems to be only one hard-coded exception within Visual Studio and this is *.Designer.cs. So there is no solution to accomplish this problem.
You could right-click the source file, choose "View Code", then click "Set as Default". It's a bit of a blunt instrument, but if you have more false components in your solution than real components, then you may find it convenient.
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