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A set of source code files —including XAML ones— which I tend to reuse once and again

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IMPORTANT NOTE: I decided to move this effort into the post series Xamarin.Forms XAML so won't be updating this project anymore.

Xamarin Crumbs

A set of source code files —including XAML ones— which I tend to reuse once and again.

Instead of going to the last project I made, the idea is to look here. NuGet looks too much for me here, that's the reason why a simple Shared Project aglutinates everything I may need. I simply take all those pieces likely to reuse, clean them a little bit up (as changing its namespace, for instance) and ready to go.

NOTE: It's not intended to provide a buildable project, it hasn't got value per se. Its actual value is to server as a small repository of files which can be copied into our actual solutions.

How can I use this?

Ideally, you can clone this repo as a submodule into your current project. Adding XamarinCrumbs.shproj to your Solution will make it easier to pick any file.

However, you can also navigate through GitHub and simply copy & paste.

Project structure

XamarinForms/

We recommend writting XAML by having one attribute per line —we call this Merge-friendly XAML. The main reason's just that: merges are easier to handle when changes appear per line, instead of having to look which attribute/s were changed among a bunch. Also, having a limit of 120 chars per line help us work with multiple files open as columns.

<ContentView
    VerticalOptions="Start">
    <ContentView.Padding>
        <Thickness
            Top="{StaticResource DefaultMargin}"
            Right="{StaticResource DefaultMargin}"
            Bottom="{StaticResource DefaultMargin}"/>
    </ContentView.Padding>
    <Label
        Text="{Binding Key}"
        Style="{StaticResource 20BoldFontStyle}"
        TextColor="{StaticResource WhiteColor}"/>
</ContentView>

Settings.StyleCop

  1. With a Solution opened, add StyleCop.MSBuild NuGet to every project you'd like to enforce coding guidelines
  2. On such same projects, edit the .csproj to add the following line:
<PropertyGroup>
  [...]
  <!-- This' the line! -->
  <StyleCopTreatErrorsAsWarnings>false</StyleCopTreatErrorsAsWarnings>
</PropertyGroup>
  1. At the Solution root, place a Settings.StyleCop file like this
  2. Bonus: You can edit visually which rules to apply by running this through CMD:

PathToYourSolution\packages\StyleCop.MSBuild.5.0.0\tools>StyleCop.SettingsEditor.exe ..\..\..\Settings.StyleCop

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A set of source code files —including XAML ones— which I tend to reuse once and again

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