this is what I\'m currently doing:
protected void setupProject()
{
bool lbDone = false;
int liCount = 0;
while (!lbDone &
I didn't have much luck with the recommended way from MSDN, and it seemed rather complicated. What I have done is to wrap up the re-try logic, rather like in the original post, into a generic utility function. You call it like this:
Projects projects = Utils.call( () => (m_dteSolution.Projects) );
The 'call' function calls the function (passed in as a lambda expression) and will retry if necessary. Because it is a generic function, you can use it to call any EnvDTE properties or methods, and it will return the correct type.
Here's the code for the function:
public static T call(Func fn)
{
// We will try to call the function up to 100 times...
for (int i=0; i<100; ++i)
{
try
{
// We call the function passed in and return the result...
return fn();
}
catch (COMException)
{
// We've caught a COM exception, which is most likely
// a Server is Busy exception. So we sleep for a short
// while, and then try again...
Thread.Sleep(1);
}
}
throw new Exception("'call' failed to call function after 100 tries.");
}
As the original post says, foreach over EnvDTE collections can be a problem as there are implicit calls during the looping. So I use my 'call' function to get the Count proprty and then iterate using an index. It's uglier than foreach, but the 'call' function makes it not so bad, as there aren't so many try...catches around. For example:
int numProjects = Utils.call(() => (projects.Count));
for (int i = 1; i <= numProjects; ++i)
{
Project project = Utils.call(() => (projects.Item(i)));
parseProject(project);
}