Microsoft Visual Studio uses XML to save its .vcproj
project files. So diffing XML project files should be easily.
Unfortunately, if you change any
I think I've found the reason for this shuffle. At least in VS2008.
If you install the x64 compilers, VS will order projects as:
Debug|Win32
Debug|x64
Release|Win32
Release|x64
If you don't it will order them like:
Debug|Win32
Release|Win32
Debug|x64
Release|x64
So make sure all your peers have the same compiler set installed, so it won't shuffle.
Tested it and this behavior appears to be reproducible.
My team at Adobe has seen the same thing in vs2008. Just a basic Debug/Release, win32/win64 project gives you 4 configurations and random shuffling. Several people have tried to figure out when and why devstudio reorders, but current thought is the sort key is a keyword hash - hence semi-random. We've given up and in code reviews just summarize the "real" changes.
We are seeing this here at work now, with project files where the configurations are reordered on several peoples computers, and it is very frustrating...
*Note: We all use VS 2008 Pro, not Team
At first it looks like they are randomly reordered, but there is in fact a pattern and it is not random at all.
For one group the configurations are ordered by Platform, then by Config:
For the other group the configurations are ordered by Config, then by Platform:
Looking through perforce history, this is consistent with multiple projects submitted by the same sets of people, and there is about a 50/50 split, so it is not just happening for one person.
Is this the same issue that you are all seeing? If so, I hope this pattern helps find a solution that does not involve a macro/extra diff step...
It has to be a setting somewhere, or a side effect of clicking something, since it is 100% reproducible per each of these machines. Even if it is something silly like which option you choose for your initial environment layout (VC++, VB, General Development, ect...)
This seems to come up every now and then.
Perhaps it is a problem ripe for a plug-in or other normalizing tool.
It would be a great side-business, until MS decides to fix it. Then you're out of luck - unless of course they offer to buy your IP.
Anyone want to start an open source project, or commercial product? I'm game.
I might have a go at a stand-alone normalizing tool, then see if I can turn it into a plugin.
I use WinMerge as my diff-tool and I enabled the moved block detection. It doesn't quite fix the issue, but it makes visualizing the differences a little bit more bearable.
Which version of Visual Studio are you seeing this in?
I do a lot of work with .vcproj files (we maintain versions of the project files for our libraries in multiple Visual Studio versions, and I'm always diffing and merging the things) but I've never seen this behaviour.