Found 1,832 packages
.NET Compiler Platform ("Roslyn") support for creating C# editing experiences. More details at https://aka.ms/roslyn-packages This package was built from the source at https://github.com/dotnet/roslyn/commit/6c4a46a31302167b425d5e0a31ea83c9a9aa1d09.
Note: This package is deprecated. Please use Microsoft.Net.Compilers.Toolset instead .NET Compilers package. Referencing this package will cause the project to be built using the C# and Visual Basic compilers contained in the package, as opposed to the version installed with MSBuild. The tools in this package require .NET Framework 4.7.2+ More details at https://aka.ms/roslyn-packages This package was built from the source at https://github.com/dotnet/roslyn/commit/46c8f4f56765e16b92759de8098494b36cfb84f5.
Microsoft .NET Compiler Platform ("Roslyn") CSharp scripting package. More details at https://aka.ms/roslyn-packages This package was built from the source at https://github.com/dotnet/roslyn/commit/6c4a46a31302167b425d5e0a31ea83c9a9aa1d09.
A collection of formatting analyzers, powered by Roslyn. - All analyzers are disabled by default.
Roslyn analyzers that spot Bugs, Vulnerabilities and Code Smells in your code. For an even better overall experience, you can use SonarQube for IDE (Visual Studio, Rider, see https://www.sonarsource.com/products/sonarlint), which is a free extension that can be used standalone or with SonarQube (Server, Cloud, see: https://www.sonarsource.com/products/sonarqube/ and https://www.sonarsource.com/products/sonarcloud/).
.NET Compiler Platform ("Roslyn"). This is the all-in-one package (a superset of all assemblies). You can install any of these sub-packages if you only want part of the functionality: - "Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.CSharp.Workspaces" (C# compiler + services) - "Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.VisualBasic.Workspaces" (VB compiler + services) - "Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.Compilers" (both compilers) - "Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.CSharp" (only the C# compiler) - "Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.VisualBasic (only the VB compiler) More details at https://aka.ms/roslyn-packages This package was built from the source at https://github.com/dotnet/roslyn/commit/6c4a46a31302167b425d5e0a31ea83c9a9aa1d09.
Analyzer utilities for various analyses, including Dataflow analysis based on ControlFlowGraph API in Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.
Evaluate, Compile and Execute C# code at runtime. Support: Dynamic LINQ, Extension Method, Expando Object, and more! Online Example: https://dotnetfiddle.net/COq6FC Include free and prime features.
A package that offers attributes to drive code generation. API: * CodeGeneration.Roslyn.CodeGenerationAttributeAttribute
An MSBuild CodeTaskFactory that uses Roslyn compiler for cross platform compatibility.
A collection of analyzers for Roslyn API. - This package is applicable for projects that reference Roslyn packages (Microsoft.CodeAnalysis*).
Roslyn analyzers that aim to help security audits on .NET applications.
Microsoft.CodeAnalysis Version Check Analyzer
Provides diagnostic analyzers to warn about incorrect usage of NSubstitute in C#.
.NET Compiler Platform ("Roslyn") support for creating Visual Basic editing experiences. More details at https://aka.ms/roslyn-packages This package was built from the source at https://github.com/dotnet/roslyn/commit/6c4a46a31302167b425d5e0a31ea83c9a9aa1d09.
Private analyzers specific to Roslyn repo. These analyzers are not intended for public consumptions outside of the Roslyn repo.
Roslyn Analyzer Test Framework Common Types.
Source code generation tool that hosts custom generators (AKA Plugins). This package contains MSBuild targets that run the tool during a build, before compilation. See project site for details.
Library for creating source generators. API (types contained): * CodeGeneration.Roslyn.ICodeGenerator * CodeGeneration.Roslyn.IRichCodeGenerator * CodeGeneration.Roslyn.Logger * CodeGeneration.Roslyn.RichGenerationResult * CodeGeneration.Roslyn.TransformationContext
Provides abstractions for reading `.deps` files. When a .NET application is compiled, the SDK generates a JSON manifest file (`<ApplicationName>.deps.json`) that contains information about application dependencies. You can use `Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyModel` to read information from this manifest at run time. This is useful when you want to dynamically compile code (for example, using Roslyn Emit API) referencing the same dependencies as your main application. By default, the dependency manifest contains information about the application's target framework and runtime dependencies. Set the PreserveCompilationContext project property to `true` to additionally include information about reference assemblies used during compilation.