Reviews
Review: Codify
- By Mike Gunderloy
- January 9, 2004
Codify 1.3.1
$75
Workstate Technologies, LLC
Columbus, Ohio
(412) 436-0603
www.workstate.com
Codify is a code-generation tool for Visual Studio .NET with some
interesting features. In particular, it's been designed to encourage
code generation on a micro scale. Instead of building entire classes or
projects, the creators suggest more modest uses: building a property
backed with a static variable, for example, or defining a custom
exception class. Codify is aimed mainly at Visual Studio .NET, with
implementations for C#, VB .NET, and C++ projects. There's also a
standalone FileBuilder that uses the same techniques to create arbitrary
disk files.
Codify uses custom templates named CodeBuilders to do its work.
CodeBuilders combine scripting (in a language resembling ASP.NET) with
parameter schemes that let you enter all manner of data at runtime. When
you insert a CodeBuilder into your code, Codify wraps it in a region and
adds information on your supplied parameter values in a comment at the
top of the region. This lets Codify re-entrantly edit generated code
easily. Templates can even contain user code regions: chunks that are
not replaced when the code is regenerated, and so which are perfect for
customization after code generation.
When you use a CodeBuilder in your project, Codify adds a local copy of
the template. That way you can make temporary modifications to the
generated code in one project without affecting others that might be
using the same template. The product supplies some useful templates to
get you started. These range from a builder of simple properties to one
that walks an entire SQL Server database, building methods to invoke
stored procedures for you.
Codify is fast, works well, and is easy to use once you've got your
templates set up. The documentation is a bit sketchy, but the supplied
templates include one whose entire purpose is to hold commented
scripting code showing off Codify's capabilities. These include examples
of property access from the hierarchy of parameters and using the Visual
Studio .NET automation model from within your custom code.
Codify is probably the simplest useful code generator that I've seen. If
you'd like to give it a spin, there's a 15-day trial version available
from the company's Web site.
About the Author
Mike Gunderloy has been developing software for a quarter-century now, and writing about it for nearly as long. He walked away from a .NET development career in 2006 and has been a happy Rails user ever since. Mike blogs at A Fresh Cup.