JetBrains Rider 2022.2 Help

Use annotations to refine code inspection

Code inspection and many other JetBrains Rider features largely rely on knowing behavior of language constructs to detect issues, suggest possible improvements, and help you in other ways.

However, this kind of analysis cannot detect everything. For example, if a method is designed as a formatting method no structural analysis will find a possible issue if a method invocation does not include necessary arguments.

In this and a lot of other cases, the JetBrains Rider's JetBrains.Annotations is of a great help. By using attributes declared in this framework you can make JetBrains Rider analyze code the way you need it. For example, you can annotate a method with the [StringFormatMethod] to indicate custom methods that work the same as System.String.Format():

[StringFormatMethod("message")] void ShowError(string message, params object[] args) { /* do something */ } void Foo(string failureDetails) { ShowError("Failed: {0}"); // Warning: Non-existing argument in format string }

This being the simplest example, there are other helpful attributes with more complex use cases. You can find the full list of these attributes in the reference.

In most cases, code annotation attributes enable specific code inspections, for example:

Also, code annotations enable more quick-fixes, code completion suggestions, and code generation features on annotated items. The annotations are also required to create and use Source templates.

JetBrains Rider allows you to annotate code symbols in two ways:

  • You can annotate symbols in your source code as shown in the example above. In this case, you need to reference the JetBrains.Annotations namespace in your project. For more information, see Annotations in source code.

  • Even if you do not have access to sources, you can annotate symbols in compiled library code. For more information, see External annotations.

Last modified: 13 July 2022