We are working in Visual Studio with TFS.
We are facing one issue in it. if we work offline for, and then go online, then rather than showing conflicts on files which have been changes, it asks to checkout all files or it will show confilit in all files.
Can any body have idea if this behaviour. How to resolve it??
Related
My projects on Visual Studio 2019 were working fine. There was an auto-update and since then, I keep getting this annoying message:
Please wait for an editor command to finish.
Is there a solution to this?
I have fixed that problem by deleting .vs folder from project.
update
Some times .vs may be hidden in solution folder make it visible from folder option
Like as Akbar Asghari said, just delete .vs folder from project (located in the root solution, this folder is system hidden).
Close the VS or kill the task.
Delete the folder .vs
Reopen solution and be happy.
Version: Visual Studio Community 2022 (17.3.6)
I tried the provided solution of deleting the .vs folder from the project without success. However, my problem seemed to go away when "Automatic brace-completion" was disabled.
Note: My problem was specific to editing a small JSON file. Maybe this will help others have an idea what to look for.
When I updated and added some more Rapid XAML extension in VS 2019 I started to get this message. So I deleted these extensions and it solved the problem but I also deleted the .vs folder in the solution I was working in. However this was happening in all the solutions so I think it was the extensions that was causing the issue.
I had a simmilar issue but the other methods did not work.
I have activated GitHub Copilot lately. A while it worked flawlessly (I guess Copilot was watching during the first period of time). Then, the already included AI of VS2022 - namely ItelliCode - and Github were active at the same time and caused crashes.
When I disabled either IntelliCode or Copilot, I had no more crashes.
To disable IntelliCode you can go to Tools->Options->IntelliCode and disable "C# suggestions".
Or disable Copilot: Tools->Options->GitHub->Copilot and set "Enable Globally" to false.
Had the same problem and even after doing what Akbar Asghari said, it didn't work. Then I reset the Keyboard Shortcuts of VS22 Mac to default i.e. Visual Studio for Mac and it resolved the issue. I had set it to VSC Keybindings earlier.
Link to Screenshot
After unchecking the box Auto cancel long running auxiliary operations on typing in Tools>Options>Text Editor>Advanced the message box does not appear anymore.
I was able to resume working normally after doing so and VS behaved normally for all the session after that.
I have a ASP Project running Visual Studio 2013 having very bad Performance while debuging/running the Project. The same Project running on a normal IIS Server is super fast with no Problems. Other Projects are running also super fast with no Problems (also on VS2013).
I have already tryed the following:
Delete All Breakpoints does nothing.
Debug or Release version, doesn't matter.
start without Debugging has the same problem.
Putting my project on a full IIS implementation on a web server runs it super fast with no problems.
Clean Solution, or deleting the .suo also do nothing
comment all the CodeBehind and the JavaScript
the solution with symbol loading from Visual Studio debugging/loading very slow also dont work.
Another often mentioned solution is to deactivate Intellitrace, but I don't found how to do that in VS2013 (the Intellitrace MenuItem in the Tools/Options Menu is missing)
There are many empty ScriptDocuments created while running, dont know if that has anything to do with the Problem.
Thanks for any Ideas!
This may sound strange, I had the same problem and tried all suggestions I found on the internet. The cause for me was I has a blank DVD in my drive. I found this by looking at where Visual Studio was trying to load the symbols from "my d drive (dvd)". After I ejected the blank DVD it was back to normal. This was very strange but just saying, check where VS is trying to load the symbols from in the output window. Hope this save someone from running round in circles.
Bit of a weird one. For some reason one of my DNN modules keeps being converted into an Application in IIS7 in my development environment. Meaning when I try to view a page that contains that module it can't find the module correctly. It's ok if I go into IIS and delete the application, then restart the site but is a bit of a pain and am little worried it might do this when uploaded to the live server and disable the whole site.
Anyone encountered anything like this before? Any thoughts?
This is a common problem with my VS templates, though not for everyone, and it doesn't happen all the time. It stems from Visual Studio, so it shouldn't ever be a problem on your production servers, unless you upload source and try to compile there, than it might be an issue.
HuwD,
A good resource might be my module template installation video which gives good information on setting up your development environment and debugging issues (regardless of the template you use). Check out between 1:30 and 5:00 minutes for the environment setup, and after 19 minutes some of the troubleshooting.
A couple common problems I see Visual Studio doing is creating an unwanted virtual directory on the DesktopModules folder and/or creating an unwanted web.config in the module's root.
Another good resource is Dnnhero.com. In the development section there is a series on DNN7 environment and template setup.
You may want to give a try a free module called Users Importer - A bit old but worth a try.
Here is a paid alternative: Bulk User Manager
when searching the internet, i came across the TideSDK which I learnt was made for develoing desktop apps with HTML, CSS & Javascript. As an experienced web designer I downloaded it hoping to begin creating desktop apps with my HTML, CSS & Jscript experience immediately. But, that wasn't the case.
Immediately I launched it I saw just two buttons one to import, the other to create new project. Since I had nothing to import, i opt to create new project. After filling the spaces for project type(project type was fixed on desktop), name, app id, directory, company/personal URL,the Titanium SDK Version was left inactive ( I don't know why but i thought it was minor), I expected to see some spaces to write my codes but none. Rather after saving my changes, I brought to a 'console' which was also inactive. No cursor at all except some buttons with lauch app, kill app, package with Runtime, package without runtime which were all not yielding any result. Infact after clicking each of them, I still remained in the inactive console.
In my curiousity to get things working, I have done many researches on the net without a fruitful result. The best article I have gotten so far is from: http://seyekuyinu.com/how-to-set-up-the-tide-sdk-developing-desktop-applications-with-html5-css3-and-javascript/ but even that did not work fine. I downloaded the Tiv Community App which suppose to serve as the IDE but it could not be installed.The installer always stop on the way. I have tried to instal it on my home laptop and the office desktop but it could not be completed in any of them. Please if you want to reply to this question, i would love you to download the Tiv Community app and see what am talking about. I have also downloaded the helloworld from Github but when I try to import, it gives an error message something like "Importing desktop project, but not desktop SDK found in your system". I downloaded the desktopsdk-1.2.0.C4-win32 but the installer is not work - 'cannot locate application path'.
Please, am curious about this whole project and would appreciate any useful reply. I would also appreciate if TideSDK Developer team could write a comprehensive 'getting started guide' but the guide avaiable now is not meeting up with our curiousity for getting started in SDK. Thanks
Checkout Getting Started Guide http://tidesdk.multipart.net/docs/user-dev/generated/#!/guide/getting_started
TideSDK's latest release version is 1.3.1-beta
You need to download the SDK from http://tidesdk.org and extract the same in appropriate directory as mentioned in getting started guide.
We recently migrated from VS 2008 to VS 2010. The migration went fine, except for our web project. Before, in VS 2008, the site showed up as http://localhost/Website. Now, it appears as C:...\Website. It appears that when we did the migration, VS started to treat it as a file system website.
I've tried removing the existing site and re-adding it as an existing website, but it still displays it as C:...\Website. Is there any way to convert it back to show it as a http://localhost/website, and run through IIS, as opposed to the default ASP.NET Development Server?
Special thanks to John Dundon at Microsoft for helping me resolve the issue. Here's what he said:
Thanks for all the details. This actually sounds like a quirky behavior
in VS that I think I can help you work
around.
I believe the reason it’s remembering
to use the local development server is
because it got stored in the SUO file.
So there are two possible ways to fix
this:
Re-open your solution from source control as an administrator on the
machine with IIS installed and
everything should get downloaded to
its right place
If you close VS, delete the SUO file (note – this will erase some
settings about the state of your
solution but shouldn’t cause any real
data loss), and then re-open the
solution, it should ask you to
re-download that particular web site
and will try to make it an IIS web
site again.
Note however though that since your
virtual directory already exists on
your machine, it’s going to ask you if
you want to use it – I’m assuming you
do, but it will overwrite any files
when it does.
Let me know if this works for you (and
while you technically shouldn’t need
to, it may be a good idea to back up
any work you’ve done in this
enlistment that hasn’t been checked in
prior to trying this).
I followed his advice and removed my SUO file and re-opened the solution. The website was automatically fixed as http://localhost/Website and it also checked out the .SLN file as well, and when I checked it in, it fixed the issue for other developers as well. Hope this solution helps out others as well with this quirky issue.
Look in the project properties, on the Web tab. You'll be able to select whether to use IIS or the development server, and which virtual directory to use.