JetBrains Rider 2024.3 Help

Types

The Types view shows a list of objects in the selected object set. For convenience, all objects are grouped by their type: each row in the list represents a specific type. All objects of that type existing in the set are counted under this row. You can use the Types view to identify objects that consume too much memory or shouldn't be in memory.

The list consists of the following columns:

Name

Description

Type

Type name.

Objects count

The number of objects of the same type.

Bytes

The overall shallow size of objects in bytes.

Minimum retained bytes

The overall size of all exclusively retained objects in bytes. This is a lower estimate of how many bytes will be freed if you remove all objects of a certain type.

Example

Example. Group by Types

Group objects in the list

Types view grouping

For convenience, you can group the list in four different ways:

  • Plain List

    Objects are displayed in a plain list. This is the easiest way to identify objects with the highest memory usage.

  • Group by Namespace

    Objects are grouped by their namespace. This type of grouping is very convenient when you want to focus on determining issues in your own classes.

  • Group by Assembly

    Objects are grouped by the assembly they come from. This type of grouping can also be used to separate your own classes from the system ones.

  • Group by Interface

    Objects are grouped by interfaces they implement. If an object implements more than one interface, it will be displayed under each implemented interface.

Filter objects

You can filter out objects that are of no interest to your analysis by type .

To narrow the list

  • Start typing the desired string pattern. JetBrains Rider will highlight matching strings.

You can make your search more efficient by using the following tips:

  • Use CamelHumps. E.g. fo will return objects of both System.Drawing.Font and MS.Utility.FrugalObjectList types.

  • Use special symbols, like wildcards and others. The full list is shown in the table below.

Special symbols and filter examples

Symbol

Description

Example

*

Wildcard

*


All objects in the set

sys.*.data


All types and namespaces that match the pattern. E.g. System.Data, System.Windows.Controls.Datagrid, and System.Windows.Data.Binding.

sys.*.data.


Only namespaces that match the pattern. E.g. System.Windows.Data.Binding but not System.Windows.Controls.Datagrid.

Arrays

[]

Leave only arrays

str[]


Arrays, containing str in their type or namespace. E.g. String[].

[,


[,,


...


or


[,]


[,,]


...

Leave only arrays of the specified or higher (if brackets are not closed) dimension

str[,,


Arrays with the dimension 3 and higher containing str in their type or namespace. E.g. String[,,] and String[,,,].

str[,,]


Three-dimensional arrays containing str in their type or namespace. E.g. String[,,].

!a

Exclude arrays from the result

!a str


Objects (excluding arrays) containing str in their type or namespace. E.g. String but not String[].

Generic type arguments

<

Leave only types with generic type arguments

str<


Only objects containing str in their type or namespace and having generic type arguments. E.g. FileStreamStorage<Char> but not List<String>.

<str


Only objects containing str in their generic type arguments. E.g. List<String> but not FileStreamStorage<Char>.

<,


<,,


...


or


<,>


<,,>


...


Leave only objects with the specified number of generic type arguments

fun<,,>


Objects containing fun in their type or namespace and having three generic type arguments. E.g. Func<String, Object, Object>.

fun<str,,task


Objects containing fun in their type or namespace and having three or generic type arguments that match the pattern. E.g. Func<Stream, IAsyncResult, TaskResult, EventArgs>.

!g

Exclude generic type arguments from the search scope

!g str


Objects (that do not have generic type arguments) containing str in their type or namespace. E.g. String but not List<String>.

#c


#struct


#m


#ns

Search by type, value type, method, or namespace.

#ns Feature


Objects containing Feature in their namespace.

Select objects for further analysis

In the Types view, you can select the following subjects for further analysis:

To select objects of a specific type

  • Do one of the following:

    • Double-click the type in the list.

    • Right-click the type and choose Open this object set.

    After this, the selected object set is added to the analysis path on the left and you can use other object set views to analyze the objects in more detail.

To select the objects that are exclusively retained by the analyzed objects set

  • Click the Open retained objects Open objects retained by this set button.

    After this, the Exclusively retained objects subject will be added to the analysis path on the left and the list of desired objects will be displayed in the Group by Types view.

Last modified: 25 July 2024