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Silverlight Tools for VS and F1 Help

If you've installed the Silverlight Tools for Visual Studio 2008, you may have noticed that pressing F1 in the VS Code Editor or in XAML View can take you someplace unexpected. You'll see this with types and members that are "shared" between Silverlight and the .NET Framework, which means that shared types have the same name and namespace. F1 Help is unable to disambiguate between the two types, and it chooses the last one installed, which is almost always the offline Help for Silverlight Tools.

The workaround is to adjust the settings in Visual Studio's Tools|Options|Environment|Help|Online dialog box. There are two scenarios:

  • In the Tools|Options dialog box, set your preferences to use local help. In this case, pressing F1 on a .NET/Silverlight shared member always goes to the Silverlight version, regardless of whether you are developing for .NET or Silverlight.
  • In the Tools|Options dialog box, set your preferences to use online help. In this case, pressing F1 on a .NET/Silverlight shared member always goes to the .NET online version, regardless of whether you are developing for .NET or Silverlight.

To get the Help content you expect from F1, use the following settings.

  • For .NET and WPF development, select Try online first, then local.
  • For Silverlight development, select Try local only, not online.

If you are developing with both frameworks in the same solution, you'll need to toggle between the two settings.

Update: Changed "Silverlight Toolkit" to "Silverlight Tools for VS." My bad.

Technorati Tags: F1,WPF Designer,Visual Studio,Silverlight Tools

Comments

  • Anonymous
    November 22, 2008
    PingBack from http://blogs.msdn.com/silverlight_sdk/archive/2008/11/22/silverlight-toolkit-and-f1-help.aspx

  • Anonymous
    November 23, 2008
    It's getting to the point where I think the massed developers of the world are going to have to storm Redmond and burn the department responsible for F1/MSDN. Thanks for letting me know why F1 had just got even worse though, I hadn't associated it with the Silverlight install. Which VP should we be lambasting over the disgrace which is VS help?  AprilR's efforts seem worthy but entirely out of scale for the magnitude of the problem.

  • Anonymous
    November 23, 2008
    In this issue: Silverlight SDK, Nikhil Kothari, Ruurd Boeke, and David Betz. From SilverlightCream.com

  • Anonymous
    November 25, 2008
    You are voted (great) - Trackback from Web Development Community

  • Anonymous
    March 16, 2009
    Workaround: Visual Studio contextual help brings up Silverlight help