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Alias Command

Applies to: yesVisual Studio noVisual Studio for Mac

Note

This article applies to Visual Studio 2017. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here

Creates a new alias for a complete command, complete command and arguments, or another alias.

Tip

Typing >alias without any arguments displays the current list of aliases and their definitions.

Syntax

Tools.Alias [/delete] [/reset] [aliasname] [aliasstring]

Arguments

aliasname
Optional. The name for the new alias. If no value is supplied for aliasname, a list of the current aliases and their definitions appears.

aliasstring
Optional. The complete command name or existing alias and any parameters that you want to create as an alias. If no value is supplied for aliasstring, the alias name and alias string for the specified alias displays.

Switches

/delete or /del or /d
Optional. Deletes the specified alias, removing it from autocompletion.

/reset
Optional. Resets the list of pre-defined aliases to its original settings. That is, it restores all pre-defined aliases and removes all user-defined aliases.

Remarks

Since aliases represent commands, they must be located at the beginning of the command line.

When issuing this command, you should include the switches immediately after the command, not after the aliases, otherwise the switch itself will be included as part of the alias string.

The /reset switch asks for a confirmation before the aliases are restored. There is no short form of /reset.

Examples

This example creates a new alias, upper, for the complete command Edit.MakeUpperCase.

>Tools.Alias upper Edit.MakeUpperCase

This example deletes the alias, upper.

>Tools.alias /delete upper

This example displays a list of all current aliases and definitions.

>Tools.Alias

See also