The EditorConfig .NET core provides the same functionality as the EditorConfig C Core and EditorConfig Python Core.
The library exists on nuget as:
nuget install editorconfig
The .NET core tool exists under:
dotnet tool install editorconfig-tool
Usage as a library:
var parser = new EditorConfigParser();
var configuration = parser.Parse(fileName);
foreach (var kv in configuration.Properties)
{
Console.WriteLine("{0}={1}", kv.Key, kv.Value);
}
Usage as a command line tool:
You can omit dotnet
if you install this as a global tool
> dotnet editorconfig
Usage: editorconfig [OPTIONS] FILEPATH1 [FILEPATH2 FILEPATH3 ...]
EditorConfig .NET Core Version 0.12
FILEPATH can be a hyphen (-) if you want path(s) to be read from stdin.
Options:
-h, --help output usage information
-V, --version output the version number
-f <path> Specify conf filename other than ".editorconfig"
-b <version> Specify version (used by devs to test compatibility)
Example:
> dotnet editorconfig C:\Users\zoidberg\Documents\anatomy.md
charset=utf-8
insert_final_newline=true
end_of_line=lf
tab_width=8
trim_trailing_whitespace=sometimes
Clone this repos and init the test submodule
git clone [email protected]:editorconfig/editorconfig-core-net.git
git submodule init
git submodule update
building in visual studio should just work (tm)
Building on the command line (will run all the unit tests too)
build
Release builds can be made using
build release X.X.X
We have several NUnit tests that you can run from visual studio or the build scripts.
If you want to run the official editorconfig tests you'll need to install CMAKE and call
cmake .
in the root of this repository once.
After which you can simply call
ctest .
To run the official editorconfig tests located in /tests
right now we pass all but one related to utf-8 which fails
when run from ctest .
but when I run it directly from the commandline it succeeds.