Problem
With the release of Microsoft Dynamics AX 7 the development moved to the Visual Studio environment.This had a lot of advantages, like the ability to use any 3rd party add-ons of various sort (which we actually have not seen that many of being applied to AX so far), all the VS goodies that come out of the box, a more familiar IDE for new developers, etc.
But it also has its disadvantages, like the Cross-References display window.
- First of all, the indicator of whether a particular reference is writing or reading is gone.
- And we now display the xRefs using the standard Visual Studio "Find Symbols Results" window, which has one huge drawback as well - no way to filter on the data displayed, or copy that data somewhere else to do that.
Solution
I was bothered by this lack of functionality for a while, so I went out to find if there's an existing solution. I came across this post, which seems like a sufficient solution for the problem, in my opinion. Kudos to the author!
I have modified the project a bit to better suite AX needs, as I planned to browse the data in Excel, which has rich filtering capabilities and more convenience in navigation, and uploaded it to GitHub so anyone can use and extend it. You can also just download the executable, if are OK with the out-of-the-box functionality I will describe below.
Project on GitHub:
Executable on my OneDrive:
Installation guide
Once you have the executable, place it in a folder on your environment running Visual Studio for AX, say, C:\Tools or whatever you prefer.
Now, from Visual Studio, go to Tools and select External tools..., as shown below:
External Tools... under Tools menu in Visual Studio |
Now add a new tool by clicking Add, and specify the Title, Command and Initial directory.
The Command should contain the path to the CopyFindReferencesToClipboard executable
Add the CopyFindReferencesToClipboard tool |
User guide
Using the tool is very simple. Say I wanted to find all references to the WHSLoadLine.Qty field.
I would navigate to that field and select Find references from the context menu.
Find references to the WHSLoadLine.Qty field |
This would bring up the standard Visual Studio dockable window Find Symbol Results, containing all the references to the selected table field.
Now, all you need to do is go to Tools and select the newly added tool from the list, as shown below:
Run the tool to copy the references to clipboard |
After a few seconds you will get a message box to pop up telling you the references have been copied to clipboard successfully, which means you can now to and paste the data to Microsoft Excel.
Note. Since the tool uses UI-level automation to copy the cross-references, the Find references window needs to be open and visible for the tool to work.
Now, you can do whatever you want with that data in Excel.
The way I typically use it is by just showing the data as a Table, after which:
- Exclude test related files (Actual tests and Test frameworks we used)
- Filter out only elements in a certain area, like WHS
- Build pivot tables/charts, if I am doing complexity analysis for a change / feature
- etc.
Here's how it looks:
Analyze the cross-references in Microsoft Excel |
Feeback
Give it a try and let me know what you think!
Hi Ivan, Thanks for this post. I have tried to copy find references of Amount EDT. but the count is 16K+. In this case, not able to copy. Could you please help me out
ReplyDeleteYep, too many, basically. Consider if you can this through the backend - the xRef are stored in the DB, after all
ReplyDeleteHi Ivan, "the indicator of whether a particular reference is writing or reading is gone" - is there any workaround to get this info please or does it mean this information is not stored anywhere anymore? Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI am not aware that this is stored anywhere today, sadly.
Delete