Visual Studio (2008) 'Clean Solution' Option

Solution 1:

It deletes all the compiled and temporary files associated with a solution. It ensures that the next build is a full one, rather than only changed files being recompiled.

Solution 2:

It deletes all the object code generated during previous compilation/build. It deletes all below kind of files:-

*.obj - object code

*.pdb - program debug databse file

*.bsc - source browser databse

*.ilk - incremental linker file

*.sbr - source browser intermediate file

*.idb - rebuild dependency file

*.lib - library file

*.exe - executable

JFYI - Even a Rebuild All command will do all this and then go on to build the complete set of source files.

-AD

Solution 3:

I wanted this to be a comment but apparently need 50 rep.

To warn others, I find the rebuild solution doesn't do a clean myself. I'll often not I need to clean it and build/rebuild it after for it to work - I think rebuild it's self forces a full compile without clean and overrides everything, but does not get rid of the extras.

Did not look into what rebuild does code wise, just a general observation in case someone else has the same issue.

Solution 4:

This is an old post, but I thought this was worth mentioning. When coding for Silverlight, I usually have Blend and VS2010 open at the same time. Because of that, sometimes VS2010 freaks out and IntelliSense can't find where stuff is or something, resulting in it falsely highlighting a lot of errors.

Cleaning the solution fixes this.

Solution 5:

Erases files created during compilation process. Effectively forces a full recompile/build next time.