Add initial app #2
Annotations
1 error and 11 warnings
test
Process completed with exit code 1.
|
Node.js 16 actions are deprecated. Please update the following actions to use Node.js 20: actions/checkout@v3, actions/setup-dotnet@v3. For more information see: https://github.blog/changelog/2023-09-22-github-actions-transitioning-from-node-16-to-node-20/.
|
build:
MyApp.ServiceModel/Posts.cs#L104
Non-nullable property 'PageStats' must contain a non-null value when exiting constructor. Consider declaring the property as nullable.
|
build:
MyApp.ServiceModel/Posts.cs#L98
Non-nullable property 'Label' must contain a non-null value when exiting constructor. Consider declaring the property as nullable.
|
build:
MyApp.ServiceModel/Emails.cs#L10
Non-nullable property 'To' must contain a non-null value when exiting constructor. Consider declaring the property as nullable.
|
build:
MyApp.ServiceModel/Emails.cs#L12
Non-nullable property 'Subject' must contain a non-null value when exiting constructor. Consider declaring the property as nullable.
|
build:
MyApp.ServiceModel/Posts.cs#L58
Non-nullable property 'Message' must contain a non-null value when exiting constructor. Consider declaring the property as nullable.
|
build:
MyApp.ServiceModel/Posts.cs#L62
Non-nullable property 'Role' must contain a non-null value when exiting constructor. Consider declaring the property as nullable.
|
build:
MyApp.ServiceModel/Posts.cs#L63
Non-nullable property 'Content' must contain a non-null value when exiting constructor. Consider declaring the property as nullable.
|
build:
MyApp.ServiceModel/Posts.cs#L27
Non-nullable property 'Title' must contain a non-null value when exiting constructor. Consider declaring the property as nullable.
|
build:
MyApp.ServiceModel/Posts.cs#L29
Non-nullable property 'ContentLicense' must contain a non-null value when exiting constructor. Consider declaring the property as nullable.
|
build:
MyApp.ServiceModel/Posts.cs#L43
Non-nullable property 'Tags' must contain a non-null value when exiting constructor. Consider declaring the property as nullable.
|
Loading