How to ignore compiler warning when using Obsolete

2019-01-16 18:20发布

问题:

So we are trying to deprecate some of our existing classes, and have started marking them as obsolete with the ObsoleteAttribute so they will stop being used. The fact that using the KnownType attribute with a type that is marked with the Obsolete attribute and is causing a compiler warning is expected. However, in our project we have warnings treated as errors so ignoring the warning isn't an option. Is there a compiler directive to suppress this warning?

The following usage causes a compiler warning:

///ProductTemplateDataSet is marked with the Obsolete attribute
[KnownType(typeof(ProductTemplateDataSet))]
public class EntityCollectionBase : System.Data.DataSet
{

}

Edit: I understand using compiler directives to ignore errors, but this compiler warning doesn't have a number.

回答1:

Use this to disable the corresponding warnings just before the offending line:

#pragma warning disable 612, 618

And reenable the warnings after it:

#pragma warning restore 612, 618

Curiously enough, there're 2 warnings related to this: CS0612 and CS0618 - one is for [Obsolete] and the other for [Obsolete("Message")]. Go figure...



回答2:

If you want to avoid having to pepper your code with #prgramas, try this:
In your csproj file, find the appropriate PropertyGroup element and add

<WarningsNotAsErrors>612,618</WarningsNotAsErrors>

here's a snippet from one of my project files:

<PropertyGroup Condition=" '$(Configuration)|$(Platform)' == 'Debug|AnyCPU' ">
    <DebugSymbols>true</DebugSymbols>
    <DebugType>full</DebugType>
    <Optimize>false</Optimize>
    <OutputPath>bin\Debug\</OutputPath>
    <DefineConstants>TRACE;DEBUG</DefineConstants>
    <ErrorReport>prompt</ErrorReport>
    <WarningLevel>4</WarningLevel>
    <TreatWarningsAsErrors>true</TreatWarningsAsErrors>
    <WarningsNotAsErrors>612,618</WarningsNotAsErrors>
    <NoWarn>
    </NoWarn>
    <WarningsAsErrors>
    </WarningsAsErrors>
</PropertyGroup>

I've used this successfully with VS2010, VS2012, and VS2013 projects.



回答3:

Could you just use a #pragma listing the appropriate warning number?

#pragma warning (C# Reference)

EDIT

Found this but it's a bit late C# - Selectively suppress custom Obsolete warnings