Posts Tagged ‘Visual Studio 2017’
Visual Studio 2017 + VS Code: Chapter 5 – Visual Studio 2017
Visual Studio 2017 is a great step forward for developer productivity. See all the cool new features in VS 2017 that make developers more productive: • The new installer • Lightweight Solution loading • Roaming Extension Manager • Run to click • Better Exception dialog • And many more To see what got fixed in…
Read MoreVisual Studio 2017 + VS Code: Chapter 4 – Visual Studio Code
Visual Studio 2017 is a great step forward for developer productivity. Visual Studio Code is the new lightweight IDE for writing code. Find out who should be using it, what features it has and how it compares to VS 2017 in terms of coding C#. To see what got fixed in VS 2017 and what…
Read MoreVisual Studio 2017 + VS Code: Chapter 3 – NET Core.
Visual Studio 2017 is a great step forward for developer productivity. .NET Core is the biggest change in .NET since .NET 1.1, giving developers better performance, cross platform development, cross platform deployment and open sourced. See how .NET Core has evolved from the first preview releases to the RTM version. To see what got fixed…
Read MoreVisual Studio 2017 + VS Code: Chapter 2 – Biggest User Gripes
Visual Studio 2017 is a great step forward for developer productivity. Visual Studio Code is the new lightweight IDE for writing code. Find out who should be using it, what features it has and how it compares to VS 2017 in terms of coding C#. To see what got fixed in VS 2017 and what…
Read MoreVisual Studio 2017 + VS Code: Chapter 1 – History
Visual Studio 2017 is a great step forward for developer productivity. Take a trip down memory lane and see all the important features from VS 2002 and Web Forms to VS 2015 and Rosyln. You can really see how the VS team have ramped up the release frequency and features over the last few years.…
Read MoreWhat’s New in Visual Studio 2017 + VS Code | Adam Cogan
Visual Studio 2017 is a great step forward for developer productivity. Thanks to a new/refreshing/cool/awesome change of attitude, Microsoft is embracing the winning tools in the development space and is building them into the next version of Visual Studio. The open sourcing of .NET Core and ASP.NET Core along with the release of the free…
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