FileCodeModel.AddNamespace(String, Object) Method

Definition

Creates a new namespace code construct and inserts the code in the correct location.

EnvDTE::CodeNamespace AddNamespace(std::wstring const & Name, winrt::Windows::Foundation::IInspectable const & Position);
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.DispId(7)]
public EnvDTE.CodeNamespace AddNamespace (string Name, object Position);
[<System.Runtime.InteropServices.DispId(7)>]
abstract member AddNamespace : string * obj -> EnvDTE.CodeNamespace
Public Function AddNamespace (Name As String, Optional Position As Object) As CodeNamespace

Parameters

Name
String

Required. The name of the new namespace.

Position
Object

Optional. Default = 0. The code element after which to add the new element. If the value is a CodeElement, then the new element is added immediately after it.

If the value is a Long data type, then AddNamespace(String, Object) indicates the element after which to add the new element.

Because collections begin their count at 1, passing 0 indicates that the new element should be placed at the beginning of the collection. A value of -1 means the element should be placed at the end.

Returns

A CodeNamespace object.

Attributes

Examples

Sub AddNamespaceExample(ByVal dte As DTE2)  

    ' Before running this example, open a code document from a project.  
    Try  
        ' Create a new namespace.  
        Dim fcm As FileCodeModel = _  
            dte.ActiveDocument.ProjectItem.FileCodeModel  
        fcm.AddNamespace("TestNamespace")  
    Catch ex As Exception  
        MsgBox(ex.Message)  
    End Try  

End Sub  
public void AddNamespaceExample(DTE2 dte)  
{  
    // Before running this example, open a code document from   
    // a project.  
    try  
    {  
        // Create a new namespace.  
        FileCodeModel fcm = _  
            dte.ActiveDocument.ProjectItem.FileCodeModel;  
        fcm.AddNamespace("TestNamespace", -1);  
    }  
    catch (Exception ex)  
    {  
        MessageBox.Show(ex.Message);  
    }  
}  

Remarks

Visual C++ requires the colon-separated (::) format for its fully qualified type names. All other languages support the period-separated format.

The correctness of the arguments is determined by the language behind the code model.

Applies to