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XML Documentation Comments (C# Programming Guide)

In Visual C# you can create documentation for your code by including XML elements in special comment fields (indicated by triple slashes) in the source code directly before the code block to which the comments refer, for example:

/// <summary>
///  This class performs an important function.
/// </summary>
public class MyClass{}

When you compile with the /doc option, the compiler will search for all XML tags in the source code and create an XML documentation file. To create the final documentation based on the compiler-generated file, you can create a custom tool or use a tool such as Sandcastle.

To refer to XML elements (for example, your function processes specific XML elements that you want to describe in an XML documentation comment), you can use the standard quoting mechanism (&lt; and &gt;). To refer to generic identifiers in code reference (cref) elements, you can use either the escape characters (for example, cref=”List&lt;T>”) or braces (cref=”List{T}”). As a special case, the compiler parses the braces as angle brackets to make the documentation comment less cumbersome to author when referring to generic identifiers.

Note

The XML documentation comments are not metadata; they are not included in the compiled assembly and therefore they are not accessible through reflection.

In This Section

For more information, see:

C# Language Specification

For more information, see the C# Language Specification. The language specification is the definitive source for C# syntax and usage.

See Also

Concepts

C# Programming Guide