Here, the folder contains two files through which I can access the code of the project in visual studio: Program.cs & ProgrammingAssignment3.csproj
When I open the Program.cs file there is no Solution Explorer, which helps in accessing different custom classes.
Even if I tried adding it from the View window:
It doesn't show anything inside it.
I also tried Tools < Options < Projects and Solutions but there's no changes.
But here when I open this .csproj file:
The solution explorer is shown and also the classes.
But unfortunately, as I need program.cs file for my work, I can't use the .csproj file. And this not just for this project but every other too. Please tell me how should I get appear the Solution explorer in the program.cs file so that I can write code easily by accessing the classes. I don't mean I've problem with the .csproj file, I want the solution explorer to get running in program.cs file.
The class (.cs) is in your project (.csproj), and the project is always in a solution (.sln). The solution isn't accessible when its part of your Unity project.
If you open the project file directly from the file explorer you can edit the class program.cs from there.
You could also open the script from Unity itself and it brings you there too.
check if you multiple installation for VS
go to environment varaible and remove if you have duplicate entiries of old one
follow below steps:
tool Menu-->Import Export Setting--> Reset All setting --> Next ---> No Just reset my setting --> Next--> general development setting --> finish
it should fix the issue
So basically I'm trying to create a simple console application. However, whenever I create one instead of seeing the usual run button I am instead greeted to a button that says attach so I read through forum after forum and I found out that I need an OBJ and a Bin folder. So I looked through my solution and found that I have no bin or obj folder created. So I tried to make a new solution however in this new solution again there is no bin or obj folder. I honestly don't know what to do anymore. Here are some images:
Make sure you are actually creating a solution in Visual Studio. The straightforward way to do that is to use File / New / Project... in the menu. Then you will likely have a dialog box, and there you need to find Console Application - C#. Then type your project and solution name - it's ok if they're the same name. Then save. That's all.
Do not use the menu to open Program.cs or other files in your solution, once your solution is created. Use the Solution Explorer, and click on the file you want to see. If you don't see the Solution Explorer, use View / Solution Explorer in the menu.
Later, when you want to reopen your solution, use File / Open / Project/Solution... in the menu, and open your solution file, whose name ends with .sln Or even easier, look in File / Recent Projects and Solutions.
You will likely want to add more source files to your projects very soon, so I'll tell you how to do that too. In the Solution Explorer, right click on the project (not the solution), and in the popup menu, point at Add and then New Item... to get a dialog, then choose Class - C#. Type the name of the file while keeping the extension .cs, and then Add it.
The process should look something like this:
It's probably likely that there is an issue with dotnet on your path variable. Go to your system variables and add C:\Program Files\dotnet\ to path. It should fix the issue if you had the same problem as me.
You may have been building a console app that can run on .NET Core and you just don't have the NuGet packages installed. Then you need to either install the appropriate packages or create a console application (.Net Framework)
I have developed an C#, ASP.NET web application in a Windows 7 machine using Visual Studio 2012. Now i had imported the entire project into VS 2017 running on windows 10 machine, and when i try to enter the debugging mode to analyze my code it shows the following error:
I guess the project configurations are conflicting hence it throws this error.
Any suggestions??
The same error happens when Visual Studio solution has selected the wrong Startup Project. The bold project is the designated startup project.
Go to the Solution Explorer > Right click on the correct project and select "Set as StartUp Project" in the context menu.
I also got this error. I ultimately got to know that I was not selecting .sln file.
In VS, you should select .sln file and it automatically loads the complete project structrue is what I learnt.
Selecting .sln file worked for me
These errors are mostly because you are not selecting the .sln or solution file. In your solution explorer tree, double click the solution file and then build and run.
This runs contrary to a users intuition that simply opening a file and running it would work. Consider it a poor user interface. Jet Brains Rider, for instance, does not have this issue.
Change Targeting Platforms with the Configuration Manager and Build the project then try to debug it.I hope this will help you.
Don't export the project folder. upload the .sln file.
It will work.
DLLs cannot be ran/debugged directly. You have to specify host application in the
Configuration Properties>Debugging>Command and then let it load the DLL by itself.
You will most likely need to copy the DLL to the directory searchable by the host application e.g. its root or ./plugins folder.
In the Configuration Properties>Build Events>Post-Build Event>Command Line simply enter something like:
copy "$(TargetPath)" "$(HOST_APP)\plugins"
The Startup Item needs to be a .exe file. It's looking at BusinessLayer.dll because BusinessLayer is currently the Startup Project.
First, build the solution. Then, set the Solution Explorer to folder view and find the .exe in one of you project's /bin folders. Right click on it and set it to the Startup Item.
Finally, click the play button in Visual Studio top bar.
EDIT: Basically the same as Thomas' answer, but I'm pointing out that the "correct project" is the one with the .exe file. I would have commented on his answer, but I have less than 50 rep right now.
Short version: I want Visual Studio 2010 to save the solution and project files to the default "My Documents" directory, while regarding my actual project directory on Dropbox as the place to put source files.
I know I can "Add Existing Item" from the project menu, but that's hardly an acceptable solution as I have to manually create absolutely every file I'm to work with in VS from explorer. I've tried adding my project folder to the project, but that just resulted in VS lying to my face:
Is it possible to actually separate Visual Studio's fugly meta files from my project directory? If not, what would be the best workaround?
I might have to do my C# in Vim because of this...
NOTE: I know C++ projects has the "Add Filter" function, which appears to do almost exactly what I want, but I'm working with C#.
Workaround
Create a symlink from the actual project folder in Dropbox to Visual Studio's project folder, e.g:
C:\Users\tomas>mklink /J "...\Visual Studio 2010\Projects\Testing\Journal\journal" "...\Dropbox\Projects\cs_testing\journal"
Junction created for ...\Visual Studio 2010\Projects\Testing\Journal\journal > ...\Dropbox\Projects\cs_testing\journal
Then add the symlink to the project as an "External Item". Now Visual Studio thinks it's being devious and adding all new files to its own project directory, but they are actually ending up in my Dropbox.
Drawbacks
Every item added to the project must be put in the symlink subfolder.
Items automatically add themselves to the namespace "<project>.<subfolder>.*", so on my case an added class was automatically called Journal.journal.JournalForm.
It's tedious to do this for every project.
There are probably more, but I just discovered this workaround. I'll edit this answer later if necessary.
This is driving me crazy.
I have a rather large project that I am trying to modify. I noticed earlier that when I typed DbCommand, visual studio did not do any syntax highlighting on it, and I am using using System.Data.Common.
Even though nothing was highlighted, the project seemed to be running fine in my browser. So I decided to run the debugger to see if things were really working as they should be.
Every time the class that didn't do the highlighting is called I get the "the source file is different from when the module was built" message.
I cleaned the solution and rebuilt it several times, deleted tmp files, followed all the directions here Getting "The source file is different from when the module was built.", restarted the web server and still it tells me the source files are different when they clearly are not.
I cannot test any of the code I have written today because of this.
How can the source be different than the binary when I just complied
it?
Is there any way to knock some sense into visual studio, or am
I just missing something?
I got this issue running a console app where the source that was different was the source that had the entry-point (static void Main). Deleting the bin and obj directories and doing a full rebuild seemed to correct this, but every time I made a code change, it would go out-of-date again.
The reason I found for this was:
I had checked "Only build startup projects and dependencies on Run" (Tools -> Options -> Projects and Solutions -> Build and Run)
In Configuration Manager, my start-up project didn't have "Build" checked
(For #2 -> accessible via the toolbar under the 'Debug/Release' drop down list.)
I was just having this same problem, my projects were all in the same solution so they were using Project to Project references, so as one changed the others should have been updated. However it was not the case, I tried to build, rebuild, close VS2010, pulled a new copy from our source control. None of this worked, what I finally ended up trying was right clicking on the project and rebuilding each project individually. That updated the .dlls and .pdb files so I could debug through.
The issue here is that your dll and or your pdb files are not in sync.
Follow these steps
Just delete the bin directory from the project where the DLL is generated.
Re-build the project.
Remove reference from the project that make reference to the DLL.
Include again the reference.
Enjoy.
In addition to these answers I had the same issue while replacing new DLLs with old ones because of the wrong path. If you are still getting this error you may not refer the wrong path for the DLLs. Go to IIS manager and click the website which uses your DLLs. On the right window click Advanced Settings and go to path of the Physical Path folder on File Explorer and be sure that you are using this folder to replace your DLLs.
Some things for you to check:
Have you double checked your project references?
Do you have a Visual Studio started web server still running? Check the system tray and look for a page with a cog icon (you may have more than one):
(source: msdn.com)
Right click and close/exit it. You may have more than one. Can you debug your changes now?
Are you running the debug version but have only built the release version (or vice versa)?
Did the compile actually succeed? I know I've clicked through the "there were errors, do you want to continue anyway?" message a couple of times without realising.
With web services, the problem can be caused by using the Visual Studio "View in Browser" command. This places the service's DLL and PDB files in the bin and obj folders. When stepping into the web service from a client, somehow Visual Studio uses the PDB in the bin (or obj) folder, but it uses the DLL in the project's output build folder. There are a couple workarounds:
Try deleting the DLL and PDB files in the web service bin and obj files.
Try clicking "View in Browser" in Visual Studio.
If you previously got the source file mismatch error, Visual Studio might have added the filename to a black list. Check your solution properties. Choose "Common Properties -> Debug Source Files" on the left side of the dialog box. If your web service source files appear in the field "Do not look for these source files", delete them.
Unload the project that has the file that is causing the error.
Reload the project.
Fixed
I just had this issue.
I tried all the above, but only this worked:
delete the .pdb file for the solution.
delete the offending .obj files (for the file being reported out of sync)
build the solution.
This fixed the issue for all builds moving forward for me.
In Visual Studio 2017 deleting the hidden .vs folder in the resolved this issue for me.
This is how I fixed the problem in Visual Studio 2010:
1) Change the 'Solutions Configurations' option from "Debug" to "Release"
2) Start debugging
3) Stop debugging and switch the 'Solutions Configurations' option back to "Debug"
This worked for me. Step 3 is optional - it was working fine when I changed it to "Release" but I wanted to change it back.
My solution:
I had included an existing project from a different solution in a new solution file.
I did not notice that when the existing project was rebuilt, it was putting the final output into the NEW solution's output directory. I had a linker path defined to look into the OLD solution's output directory.
Switching my project to search in the new solution's output directory fixed this issue for me.
I had this problem, and it turns out I was running my console application as a windows application. Switching the output type back to console fixed the issue.
I had the same problem. To fix it I used the "Release Mode" to debug in VS2013. Which is sufficient for me, because I'm working in a node js\c++ addon.
My problem was that I had two projects in my solution. The second one was a test project used to call the first one. I had picked the path to the references from the bin folder's release folder.
So whenever I made a change to the first project's code and rebuilt it, it would update the dlls in the debug folder but the calling project was pointing to the release folder, giving me the error, "the source file is different from when the module was built."
Once I deleted the reference to the main project's dll in the release folder and set it to the dll in the debug folder, the issue went away.
In my case, the #Eliott's answer doesn't work.
To solve this problem I had Exclude/Include From Project my deficient file, andalso Clean and Rebuild the solution.
After these actions, my file with my last modifications and the debugger are restored.
I hope this help.
solution:-
the problem is:-
if your some projects in a solution , refer to some other projects,
then sometimes the dll of some projects, will not update automatically, whenever you build the solution,
some projects will have previous build dlls, not latest dlls
you have to go manually and copy the dll of latest build project into referenced project
I was using Visual Studio 2013 and I had an existing project under source control.
I had downloaded a fresh copy from source control to a new directory.
After making changes to the fresh copy, when building I received the error in question.
My solution:
1) Open Documents\IISExpress\config\applicationhost.config
2) Update virtualDirectory node with directory to the fresh copy and save.
My problem was that I had a webservice in the project and I changed the build path.
Restoring the default build path solved my issue.
I had this same problem and I followed the majority of the guidance in the other answers posted here, nothing seemed to work for me.
I eventually opened IIS and recycled the application pool for my web application. I have IIS version 8.5.9600, I right-clicked my web application, then: Deploy > Recycle > Recycle application pool > OK.
That seems to have fixed it, breakpoints now being hit as expected. I think that doing this along with deleting the bin and obj folders helped my situation.
Good luck!
I know this is an old question but I just had the same problem and wanted to post here in case it helps someone else. I got a new computer and the IT dept merged my old computer with the new one. When I set up TFS, I mapped a different local path than what I was previously using, to an additional internal drive. The old path still existed from the merged data on my hard drive so I could still build and run. My IIS paths were also pointing to the old directory. Once I updated IIS to the correct path, I was able to debug just fine. I also deleted the old directory for good measure.
I also experienced that. I just open the obj folder on the project and then open the debug folder delete the .pdb file and that's all.
This error also happens if you try to make changes to a source file that is not part of the project.
I was debugging a method from a .dll of another one of my projects, where Visual Studio had quite helpfully loaded the source because the .dll had been built on the same machine and it knew the path to the source. Obviously, changing such a file isn't going to do anything unless you rebuild the referenced project.
Delete all breakpoints.
Rebuild.
Done
At Visual Studio 2015, using C++, what fixed for me the the source file is different from when the module was built problem was
restart Visual Studio.
Check if the location you pointed to using mex() in Matlab is correct (contains lib and obj files which are modified to the last date you compiled the library in Visual studio).
If this is not the case:
Make sure you are compiling Visual studio in a mode that saves .lib files :
properties -> Config properties -> General -> Config type -> static library
properties -> Config properties -> General -> Target extension=.lib (instead of exe)
Make sure the output and intermediate directories match the Matlab directory in
properties -> Config properties -> General -> Output directory
properties -> Config properties -> General -> Intermediate directory
I get this issue when debugging sometimes w/ Visual Studio but when the application is served by IIS. (we have to develop in this form for some complicated reasons that have to do with how the original developer setup this project.)
When I change the file and rebuild, that fixes it a lot of the time. I know that sounds silly, but I was just trying to debug some code to see why it's doing something weird when I haven't changed it in a while, and I tried a dozen things from this page, but it was fixed just by changing the file..
In my case, the problem was that the debugger exe path was pointing to a net5.0 bin folder. I am using net6.0, so I should've updated the exe path back when I updated the target framework. Works fine now.
Debug-> start without debugging.
This option worked for me. Hope this helps!