How to add files into features in SharePoint solution - visual-studio

Actually in my project there are two .aspx files. I want to add them into two different features called feature1 and feature2. This is my project.
Is there any way to do this ? Thank You.

You should use Module for that ! With module you can add files to your WSP solution (and deploy this files to document Library)
And after, don't forget to add your module in your feature
How to: Include Files by Using a Module

Related

Is it possible to include by default project property sheets to new projects?

So that every time I create a project using the libraries I usually use I won't have to manually add the sheet.
You can do this, but I advise against it. Main reason being it will make your project files unusable on other machines unless you also force your solution on them. Second reason you cannot expect all your projects ever are going to use the same libraries/versions/configurations of those libraries so after a while it might become unmaintainable.
You are imo better of creating a small utility which copies a project from a template you create with all imports and then changes guid and project name. Or create a template for VS which does that.
Anyway: a possible solution is to add an msbuild file which imports all default property sheets you need into the $(VCTargetsPath)\Platforms\Win32\ImportBefore\ directory (create it if it doesn't exist). The file has to have a .targets extension. More info here for example.

Orchard module not appearing in list of modules

Downloaded the source code for an Orchard module from Codeplex and added using VS2012 to my copy of the Orchard source. When I run the source the new module is not available to enable.
It probably doesn't build. Check your logs, and if you still can't see what's wrong, attach a debugger.
Thanks Hazza and Bertrand - Fixed it by unzipping into the modules folder then added the existing project from the modules folder rather than from my download folder.

VS2010 MultiProject Template

How do I add a specific, NON-PROJECT Folder to a MultiProjectTemplate?
I.e I add a projectCollection to TemplateContent with all of my involved projects as ProjectTempateLink s inside.
How do I add a non-project related folder?
I've tried Folder both inside TemplateContent and inside a Project inside TemplateContent, but it doesn't work.
Looking at the schema http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/xwkxbww4%28v=VS.100%29.aspx it should be supported? Or is there an issue with using ProjectCollection and another tag inside TemplateContent
Not so much solved, as a workaround made:
I made a blank C# project, included the files necessary.
I then made a single project-template of this, then added it to my multi-project template.
It's silly that It's not possible to add a non-project related folder, but hey...

Visual Studio solution structure using Codesmith frameworks (NetTiers / Plinqo)

I have been using the Codesmith framework NetTiers to generate a DAL etc., into a folder called, say, 'NetTiers', outside my main project's folder, and referencing the DLLs within that folder from my main project.
I've started using the Plinqo framework, and want to use the generated files from that framework within the same project as the one I'm using with NetTiers. (The reason I'm using both frameworks is that I want to get/learn the newer LINQ goodness from Plinqo, yet also have the familiar NetTiers code DAL, BLL syntax available, for compatibility.)
My question is: what's the best Visual Studio solution and file structure to use when using Codesmith templates like these? Should the frameworks' generated code be contained outside the main project and added as projects to the overall solution? Or should each template's generated code have its own solution? Should the generated files be within the main project's file structure?
I've tried combinations of each of these, and they each have their pros and cons. I'd like to know if there's a tried and tested pattern.
When it comes to .netTiers, I always compile the generated solution and add the assemblies as references to my project. This makes it much easier to upgrade/diff and regen.
However, there are going to be some cases where you would want to add your custom logic so keep this in mind.
Thanks
-Blake Niemyjski
I tend to just keep the .csp and the generated folder outside of my main app's folder. When adding a reference Visual Studio copies in the .DLLs from the built generated code. All of the generated projects sit under a main folder such as D:\CodeSmith Projects\
If you want to version control the .csp file it might be beneficial to move it in with the rest of your version controlled app files to tie it all together.
We put the generated projects inside our solution. In fact on my current project I generated the nettiers files to the location that I wanted the files to be, and Started adding my own project files to that...But we have always kept the files in the solution, that way if i need to add something to the code in the concrete classes I can do it without having to open a whole new project.
We have tried both scenarios. We settled for including the assemblies in a dependencies folder, which was shared by multiple projects.
We had problems with TFS when the projects were included in the solution. the downside, is that you can't so easily step into the .NetTiers generated code when debugging, though after a while you get used to this, and accept that whatever is in .NetTiers stays within .NetTiers!

How to associate external files with an assembly

Let's say you have a class library project that has any number of supplemental files that also need to be included with the compiled assembly (e.g. simple text files or even a legacy unmanaged DLL that's wrapped by the assembly as an interop layer). While embedding the supplemental files into the assembly itself is relatively straightforward, we have situations where this is not possible or just undesirable. We need to have them as "sidecar" files (i.e. files alongside the assembly, potentially in subdirectories relative to the assembly)
Adding those files to the project with an appropriate value for "Copy to Output Directory" specified appears to be sufficient for projects that are completely self-contained within a solution. But if a separate project in another solution adds a reference to the assembly, it does not automatically pickup its sidecar files. Is there a way in the project to somehow mark the resulting assembly such that anything referencing the assembly will also know it needs to include the associated sidecar files? How do you do this?
You can use al.exe, but there also appears to be a C# compiler option. You want to create a multifile assembly using the /linkresource C# compiler option. Instructions are here, but the command is similar to this:
csc /linkresource:N.dll /t:library A.cs
Where N.dll is a native DLL that will go wherever the managed assembly goes (including into the GAC.) There's a very clear description at the link I provided.
Have you tried creating a setup for your solution ? There's an option of including sidecar files targeting to application installation directory.
Another option would be to include the sidecar files in the Assembly resources and un-wrap them to disk when run for the first time.
What if you create a merge module containing the library plus its dependencies? Your installer will then need to reference this module, but you will ensure all of the necessary files will be present.
Unfortunately there doesn't appear to be a lot of built-in support in Visual Studio for this, although I can definitely see the use case.
If you use Subversion for your source control, then you could link in an external reference as an externals definition. This would bring in the source code, and you'd be making a reference to the necessary assembly as a project reference instead of a DLL reference, and then the copy to output directory rules would come into play.
If that's not possible, another solution would be to include commands in the pre/post-build events of your in-solution project to copy the most up-to-date sidecar files from the remote assembly on a build. Of course this comes with the caveat that it doesn't set itself up automatically when you include the DLL in your project; you have to take manual steps to set it up.
I deal with this some time ago. Its a common problem.
You can create some postbuild actions:
http://www.codingday.com/execute-batch-commands-before-or-after-compilation-using-pre-build-or-post-build-events/
Hope this helps... :)
It appears to me that you're using the wrong type of reference. There are two types of references- Reference and ProjectReference. Reference is an explicit reference to a specific assembly. ProjectReference is a reference to another project (say .csproj).
What you're looking for is ProjectReference. VS and the default MSBuild targets are setup to do CopyLocal. If you set CopyToOutputPath true for your "sidecar" files, any ProjectReferences to this project now will also pull in the same files.
I'm not sure if you can to ProjectReferences across solutions in the IDE. I deal a lot with MSBuild where sln files are not relevant and this is how I deal with it.
What we did in our project is that we created as separate build file to do all those stuffs.
In your build file you can have tags to build your main solution, then add tags to copy files you need after build.
NAnt is also your option, but right now I'm happy using Rake as my build/debug automation.
Since this cannot be integrated within Visual Studio, what I'm doing is I create a task (either in MSBuild, NAnt or Rake), that executes vsjitdebugger.exe in the end to attach it to my Visual Studio when debugging.
These are just my styles for now, you can maybe create your own style.

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