C# - Location of using statements

梦想的初衷 提交于 2019-11-28 11:10:14
Jim W

Putting "using" at the top of the files is the default way of Visual Studio. However, the recommended approach is putting the "using" statements inside of the namespace. Even MS's stylecop catches this and says the default way of VS is wrong.

Both techniques work fine.

StyleCop Rule says: Placing multiple namespace elements within a single file is generally a bad idea, but if and when this is done, it is a good idea to place all using directives within each of the namespace elements, rather than globally at the top of the file. This will scope the namespaces tightly, and will also help to avoid the kind of behavior described above.

It is important to note that when code has been written with using directives placed outside of the namespace, care should be taken when moving these directives within the namespace, to ensure that this is not changing the semantics of the code. As explained above, placing using-alias directives within the namespace element allows the compiler to choose between conflicting types in ways that will not happen when the directives are placed outside of the namespace.

Here's some links for further review:

I'd never even seen/heard of this practice until I started using StyleCop and would get flagged by rule SA1200, which I now just disable. It's odd that the .cs files that Visual Studio creates as part of a new project violate this rule by placing the using directives at the very beginning of the file, outside of the namespace.

edited, with my head hanging in shame

Ahh! The using statement you're refering to is used to import a namespace, not to wrap an IDisposable object!

Very different, ambiguous terms... you had me confused :-)

Personally I like them outside the namespace at the top of the file; but it's probably due to me switching between C# and VB.NET.

I like to organize my projects into 1-file-per-class, no inner (nested) classes, and only one class per namespace (per file) . In this situation the location of the using statement is irrelevant whether inside or outside the namespace.


The iDesign C# coding standard is a solid standard to follow (or to derive your own from). It recommends keeping the using statements outside the namespace as item #14. But it's all down to your company / project's convention

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