How do you get JavaScript/jQuery Intellisense Working in Visual Studio 2008?

10,065

Solution 1

At the top of your external JavaScript file, add the following:

/// <reference path="jQuery.js"/>

Make sure the path is correct, relative to the file's position in the folder structure, etc.

Also, any references need to be at the top of the file, before any other text, including comments - literally, the very first thing in the file. Hopefully future version of Visual Studio will work regardless of where it is in the file, or maybe they will do something altogether different...

Once you have done that and saved the file, hit Ctrl + Shift + J to force Visual Studio to update Intellisense.

Solution 2

There is an officially supported jQuery documentation JavaScript file for Visual Studio 2008. This file is only an interim fix until Microsoft releases a hotfix that will more adequately address the issue.

Embedded in ASPX:

<% if (false) { %>
    <script src="jquery-1.2.6-vsdoc.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<% } %>

Embedded in JavaScript:

/// <reference path="jquery-1.2.6-vsdoc.js" />

Pick it up here: jquery-1.2.6-vsdoc.js

References:

Solution 3

You'll want to look at this link:

http://blogs.ipona.com/james/archive/2008/02/15/JQuery-IntelliSense-in-Visual-Studio-2008.aspx

UPDATE: There is a new HotFix for Visual Studio 2008 and a new jQuery Intellisense Documentation file that brings full jQuery Intellisense to VS'08. Below are links to get these two:

http://blogs.msdn.com/webdevtools/archive/2008/11/07/hotfix-to-enable-vsdoc-js-intellisense-doc-files-is-now-available.aspx

http://blogs.msdn.com/webdevtools/archive/2008/10/28/rich-intellisense-for-jquery.aspx

Solution 4

You shouldn't need to actually reference the "-vsdoc" version. If you put the jquery-1.2.6-vsdoc.js in the same directory as jquery-1.2.6.js then Visual Studio will know to covert a jquery-1.2.6.js reference to jquery-1.2.6-vsdoc.js.

I think that will actually work for any file.

Hmmm... that gives a good workaround for another question on this site...

Edit: This feature only works with VS2008 Service Pack 1.

Solution 5

If you are including the annotated jQuery file in your source solely for intellisense, I recommend leveraging preprocessor directives to remove it from your view when you compile. Ala:

<% #if (false) %>
  <!-- This block is here for jquery intellisense only.  It will be removed by the compiler! -->
  <script type="text/javascript" src="Scripts/jquery-1.3.2-vsdoc.js"></script>
<% #endif %>

Then later in your code you can really reference jQuery. This is handy when using the Google AJAX Libraries API, because you get all the benefits Google provides you, plus intellisense.

Here is a sample of using the Libraries API:

<script type="text/javascript" src="http://www.google.com/jsapi"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
   google.load("jquery", "1.3.2", { uncompressed: false });
</script>
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Mark Struzinski
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Mark Struzinski

Application developer from Bel Air, MD. I work with .NET and the Microsoft stack for my day job. I'm learning Objective-C and Cocoa as I design my first iPhone app.

Updated on June 17, 2022

Comments

  • Mark Struzinski
    Mark Struzinski almost 2 years

    I thought jQuery Intellisense was supposed to be improved with SP1. I even downloaded an annotated version of jQuery 1.2.6, but intellisense will not work in a separate jscript file. I have the jQuery library referenced first on my web page in the <head> tag. Am I doing anything wrong?