To do so, by default you can Ctrl-click the declaration or any usage with the middle mouse button. You can also list and study symbol usages in the Peek Definition view. To show the matched items on the type dependency diagram, press Alt+Num+ or click Show on Diagram. To view and analyze the list of matched items in the Find Results window, click Show in Find Results, press Shift+Enter or + on the numeric keypad. If necessary, press Esc once to clear the filtering. Select the desired item by pressing Up and Down and then press Enter to open it in the editor. Do one of the following:Ĭlick the desired item to open it in the editor. If there are multiple usages, they appear in a popup with their contexts. Alternatively, you can press Control+Shift+A, start typing the command name in the popup, and then choose it there. Press Control+Alt+F7 or choose ReSharper | Navigate | Show Usages from the main menu. Place the caret at a symbol in the editor or select the symbol in a tool window.
Navigate to a usage of a symbol from the current context You can invoke Go to Declaration even if your caret is on a declaration to navigate through symbol usages. If you want ReSharper to jump tho the single usage in these cases, select the corresponding option ( Go to Usage: if there is only one result, navigate without displaying the list) on the Environment | Search & Navigation | General page of ReSharper options ( Alt+R, O). By default, the usage is displayed in a popup.
You can configure ReSharper behavior for the cases when a single usage is discovered. If you invoke this command and see that usage search takes too long, you can click Show in Find Results, press Shift+Enter or + on the numeric keypad - the search will continue on the background in the Find Results window. But this command is more convenient for symbols with a limited number of usages, in cases when you are looking for a specific usage and want to get to this usage without opening the Find Results window. The list of usages that you get with this command is the same as that of Find Usages. The opposite navigation is available with the Go to Declaration command. You can invoke this command from the Solution Explorer, from the File Structure window and other tool windows. I have marked with the abbreviation "std" all those that supposed to be there, so you should be able to rely on their presence, but you know what browsers are like.This command allows you quickly navigate to a specific usage of a symbol from its declaration or any other usage. The following table attempts all the combinations so you can see which work. Unlaut= uml, Dieresis= uml, Tilde= tilde,Įxample: for a capital E with a grave accent use È
Symbol, which is incorrectly called "pound". If the character that appears in the first column does not fit the description in the third column, The content of this table has been throughly tested. the less-than sign, which would always be mistaken for the beginning of an HTML tag). These are character sequences that may appear in HTML documents they represent sometimes useful symbols that are not part of the standard ASCII set or that would be difficult or impossible to type otherwise (e.g. HTML Ampersand Character Codes HTML Ampersand Character Codes