Or, should I rather ask, when will VS code formatting work properly for Razor markup? The formatting works for most structures, but it seems to choke on 'if' blocks. The code below is as it is formatted by VS. It is very easy to fix this case, with one more indent, but I nicely accepted the formatting in everyday use, and like to use it often for the bulk of my code, so I'd rather avoid manual formatting if possible. Right now I just leave it as VS formats it.
@{
if (User.Identity.IsAuthenticated)
{
<text>Hello </text>
@Html.Display("@ViewBag.UserName") <text> - </text>
@Html.ActionLink("Sign Out", "LogOff", "Account", null, new { style = "font-weight: bold;" })
}
}
I think it's important for readability that, e.g. in the above, the body of the if block is indented, besides just looking nicer.
It does not work correctly in all cases because it's a difficult problem to solve. Essentially you have 3 different editors (HTML, C#, and Razor) all interacting over the same text buffer. There are some cases (like this one) where the interactions have bugs. But we are working on improving the editor for the next release of Razor.
A better alternative here(rather than using spaces for tabs), is to change the block indenting for HTML and C#/VB to "Block" instead of "Smart". This isn't a full solution, but IMO is a far less painful work-around than using spaces!
Be sure to set the editor to use space characters and not tabs. The editor seems to completely lose its mind when tabs are used. This is a shame because all those space characters end up in the actual HTML output, greatly increasing the data transfer size. What I do is manually supplement the automatic formatting as I type. Not ideal, but hopefully Microsoft will have this figured out for the next service pack.