Documentation is the worst offender. I remember one time that running dotnet restore and later running another command with --no-restore flag wouldn't work, but running the last command without the --no-restore flag would. Creating a sane CI/CD pipeline for C# apps is a PITA.
I've never had an issue with the dotnet CLI, including the commands you're talking about. Their documentation is a bit scattered at times but for the most part they have examples on everything and walk through most scenarios.
I'm not a Microsoft employee either, just a c# dev of 10 years.
Hi. I am not a game dev, but a c# one. What is it that frustrates you about the dotnet CLI?
Edit: I use C# for work, not a Microsoft employee who works on c# dev lol
Documentation is the worst offender. I remember one time that running
dotnet restore
and later running another command with--no-restore
flag wouldn't work, but running the last command without the--no-restore
flag would. Creating a sane CI/CD pipeline for C# apps is a PITA.I've never had an issue with the dotnet CLI, including the commands you're talking about. Their documentation is a bit scattered at times but for the most part they have examples on everything and walk through most scenarios.
I'm not a Microsoft employee either, just a c# dev of 10 years.
I do a lot of work with c# CI/CD and doing what you said absolutely does work.
Most of my scripts are
It works, until it doesn't
Like everything. They likely got their configurations wrong.