Compare two files in Visual Studio

Visual StudioFileCompareComparisonDiff

Visual Studio Problem Overview


I saw the new comparison tool in Visual Studio 2012 for comparing two files or two versions of a file. I like it. But when I tried to find it I couldn't it, because I don't use TFS.

Is there a way how I can just compare two files with the built-in feature in Visual Studio (but without TFS)?

Visual Studio Solutions


Solution 1 - Visual Studio

You can invoke devenv.exe /diff list1.txt list2.txt from the Visual Studio Developer Command Prompt or, if a Visual Studio instance is already running, you can type Tools.DiffFiles in the Command window, with a handy file name completion:

Using Tools.DiffFiles from the Visual Studio Command window

Solution 2 - Visual Studio

Inspired by Vladimir Reshetnikov's answer above, I found a very comfortable way how you can instantly compare two files with Visual Studio by using drag and drop or via the "Send To" context menu. It only requires a little preparation which you need to do once and then it is useful like a Swiss army knife.

Visual Studio already has everything you need, and there are only some configuration steps required to make this working:

File compare using drag & drop

Preparation:

  1. Create a new batch file using your favorite text editor. Type the following:

    @echo off
    setlocal
    set vspath=C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\Enterprise\Common7\IDE
    start "Compare files" /B /MIN "%vspath%\devenv.exe" /diff %2 %1 First:'%2' Second:'%1'
    

    You might notice that I have reversed the %1 and %2 parameters in the batch. This is because I noticed that the file explorer passes the second file as the first parameter, and then the first file as the second parameter.

  2. Save this code as VS_FileCompare.cmd to use it, and modify vspath if required to match the location of devenv.exe (depending on the Visual Studio version you're currently using, see footnote*) )

  3. Either create a shortcut named "File Compare" for VS_FileCompare.cmd and place it on the desktop (as used in the animation below), so it is always available to drag & drop files onto it or directly place the batch file on the desktop. That's all!

Usage:

  1. Open the Windows explorer via Win + E

  2. Select two files to compare in the explorer

  3. Drag and drop them as shown in the animation below:

    DragDropDemo

  4. After a few seconds (depending on the launch time of Visual Studio), the results will be shown in Visual Studio:

    Visual Studio View

Note: It does not harm if Visual Studio is already open. In this case it will just open up a new window within the running instance of Visual Studio. So you can compare multiple file pairs, but please ensure you have selected only two files at a time.


Alternative way: SendTo context menu

Here's an alternative how you can use the batch file VS_FileCompare.cmd mentioned in the section above. It allows to use the context menu's Send To folder to compare the files.

Preparation:

  1. Create a shortcut "Compare2Files VS" for the batch file VS_FileCompare.cmd and copy it into the SendTo folder. Open the Windows explorer via Win + E
  2. Open the SendTo folder by entering shell:sendto into the file explorer's address bar (as described here). Then, put the prepared shortcut into this folder.

Usage:

  1. Open the Windows explorer via Win + E

  2. Select two files to compare in the explorer

  3. Assuming the shortcut for the batch file VS_FileCompare.cmd is named "Compare2Files VS", you can select the two files, right-click and select Send To → Compare2Files VS to invoke the compare as shown below:

    SendTo

  4. After a few seconds (depending on the launch time of Visual Studio), the results will be shown in Visual Studio:

    Visual Studio View

HINT: If you like the SendTo folder approach, there is more you can do - for example you can open a command shell directly via SendTo and it starts with the right path (the path where the selected file resides). Look here to find out how to do that. You can even combine it with the script to gain elevated rights, with only a little extra effort.


MSDN References:


*) Footnote: Because vsPath (the path to DEVENV.exe) differs depending on your version of Visual Studio, I am describing how you can find it out (Windows 10):

  1. In the Windows start menu Windows Icon Small, locate the Visual Studio icon Visual Studio Icon Small

  2. Right-click to bring up the context menu. Select MoreOpen File Location.
    Windows Explorer opens with the Visual Studio shortcut highlighted.

  3. Right-Click on the Visual Studio and select Properties

  4. In the properties dialog, you can find the path in "Target:"

    VSProperties


Animations created with Screen to gif

Solution 3 - Visual Studio

You can try the VSCommands extension from Visual Studio Gallery.

The latest release allows you to select two files and compare them:

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Solution 4 - Visual Studio

(Command Window) (Ctrl + Alt + A):

Tools.DiffFiles File1 File2

Solution 5 - Visual Studio

Visual Studio extension: File Differ by Mads Kristensen

Compare files screenshot

Solution 6 - Visual Studio

I have always been a fan of WinMerge which is an open source project. You can plug it into Visual Studio fairly easily.

http://blog.paulbouwer.com/2010/01/31/replace-diffmerge-tool-in-visual-studio-team-system-with-winmerge/

will show you how to do this

Solution 7 - Visual Studio

There is also a Visual Studio extension called CompareFiles, which does nothing else but adding the "Compare Files" entry to the Solution Explorer context menu. It invokes the built-in Visual Studio diff tool.

Just in case that someone (like me) doesn't want to install an all-in-one extension like VSCommands...

Solution 8 - Visual Studio

For Visual Studio 2019, the File Differ plugin allows to compare files in distinct projects:

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You can install it from here:

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OLD:

For Visual Studio 2017, install FileComparer2017

The problem is that you can't compare files in different projects, but you can copy the files in the same project to compare...

File difference

Solution 9 - Visual Studio

In Visual Studio 2012, 2013, 2015, you can also do it with Web Essentials. Just right click the files and from the context menu → Web EssentialDiff selected files:

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It's also available as a separate extension.

Solution 10 - Visual Studio

If you have Visual Studio installed, you could also call

"%VS110COMNTOOLS%..\IDE\vsdiffmerge.exe" "File1" "File2"

or for Visual Studio 2013:

"%VS120COMNTOOLS%..\IDE\vsdiffmerge.exe" "File1" "File2"

Source: Use Visual Studio as your Diff and Merging Tool for local files

Solution 11 - Visual Studio

In Visual Studio, the diff can be called using the Command Window and then the Tools.DiffFiles command

  1. Open the Command Window by hotkeys Ctrl + W, A or by menu ViewOther WindowsCommand Window
  2. Enter command Tools.DiffFiles "FirstFile.cs" "SecondFile.cs"

Solution 12 - Visual Studio

I had this problem as well. No TFS, but I found the article Associate a file type with a file-comparison tool helpful.

Specifically, step 1b.

Open a Visual Studio command prompt and navigate to the Common7/IDE folder and type

tf diff /configure

Solution 13 - Visual Studio

An excellent lightweight tool that gets the job done is the File Comparer Visual Studio extension by Akhil Mittal.

Solution 14 - Visual Studio

To compare any two files and merge it to one file, here are the following steps you can follow if you have Visual Studio (any version) installed.

Step 1: Open the Visual Studio command prompt. If you do not find the Visual Studio command prompt then choose Visual Studio tools

Start → Visual Studio command prompt

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Step 2: Enter the command vsdiffmerge.exe

Ignore the switch /m if you need just comparison.

Syntax 1:

vsdiffmerge <file1> <file2> <file1> <outputfile> /t /m

Syntax 2:

vsdiffmerge <basefilename> <CompareFilename> <basefilename> <OutputFilename> /t /m

Example 1:

vsdiffmerge test1.js test2.js test1.js output.js /t /m

Example 2:

vsdiffmerge.exe "C:\Users\livingston\Downloads\wa\wa\Files\pre\Test.js" "C:\Users\livingston\Downloads\wa\wa\Files\Prod\Test.js" "C:\Users\livingston\Downloads\wa\wa\Files\pre\Test.js" "C:\Users\livingston\Downloads\wa\wa\Files\output\samp.js" /t /m

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Step 3: Merge the files

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Please note that if file name does not exist in the location, it will not open the comparer.

Also you can beautify the file before you do the comparison. In Visual Studio, Ctrl + K + D.

There are a lot of beautifier sites available online.

Solution 15 - Visual Studio

When using Visual Studio with a localized language, the commands you write in the CommandWindow must be also localized. For example, my VS2019 is in portuguese so, i have to write this command:

Ferramentas.CompararArquivos

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You can show the CommandWindow (Janela de Comando in my case) through the menu View > Other Windows > Command Window or, in my case Exibir > Outras Janelas > Janela de Comando

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Solution 16 - Visual Studio

With Visual studio code its simple.
Create the bat file files_compare.bat with the code:

@echo off
setlocal
code --diff %1 %2

And to use it you just have to drag and drop the 2 files to compare on the bat file icon

Solution 17 - Visual Studio

I believe this to be one of the better extension for Visual Studio 2012. It's called Code Compare and can be found here.

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionLibor ZapletalView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - Visual StudioVladimir ReshetnikovView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - Visual StudioMattView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - Visual StudioJarek KardasView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - Visual StudiopatrickView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - Visual StudiospottedmahnView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - Visual Studiouser1877337View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - Visual StudioStephanView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - Visual StudioJuan PabloView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - Visual StudioHamid MosallaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 10 - Visual StudioChandramouleswaran RavichandraView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 11 - Visual StudioKiryl KhadanovichView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 12 - Visual StudiobillbView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 13 - Visual StudiousefulBeeView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 14 - Visual StudioGeorge LivingstonView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 15 - Visual StudioAllan RidolfiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 16 - Visual StudioMARI MathieuView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 17 - Visual StudioNathan SmithView Answer on Stackoverflow