Microsoft will launch Visual Studio 2019 on April 2nd
4 min. read
Published on
Read our disclosure page to find out how can you help MSPoweruser sustain the editorial team Read more
Back in December last year, Microsoft announced the release of Visual Studio 2019 Preview for PC and Mac. Microsoft today announced that it will launch Visual Studio 2019 on April 2nd through a launch event online.
Join us on April 2 for the launch of Visual Studio 2019. Learn about how Visual Studio 2019 is more productive, modern, and innovative, participate in live Q&As, and be the first to take the latest version for a spin.
Visual Studio 2019 is now faster, more reliable, more productive for individuals and teams, easier to use, and easier to get started with. Some of the new features included in this release are IntelliCode for AI-assisted IntelliSense, expanded refactoring capabilities, smarter debugging and more. Read about what’s new in Visual Studio 2019 below.
IDE
- Collaborate with others using Visual Studio Live Share, which is installed by default. Additional language support for C++, VB.NET, and Razor gives guests a solution view and sharing of source control diffs.
- Open code you recently worked on or start from one of the most commonly used flows like clone, open, or new project through the new start window.
- Create new projects with an improved search experience and filters using the new list of templates sorted by popularity.
- Have more vertical room for your code and a modernized look and feel through a set of new visual changes in the shell.
- View a sharper version of your IDE regardless of your display configuration and/or scaling, as we have improved support for per monitor awareness.
- Use an improved search capability in Visual Studio for menus, commands, options, and installable components.
- Quickly understand your code file’s ‘health’ with a document indicator. Run and configure through a one-click code cleanup from the indicator.
- Easily manage the preview features you are opted in to with a new Preview Features page in the Options dialog.
- MSBuild and Visual Studio now target .NET Framework 4.7.2 by default.
Performance
- Take control of how solutions load by using Visual Studio’s new performance improvements that affect stepping speed, branch switching speed, and more.
- See solution load progress in the Task Status Center.
- Choose which projects to load on solution open with solution filter files.
- Improve your typing performance by limiting the impact of auxiliary components.
- Toggle the new option to disable restoring of your project hierarchy state and tool window state.
General Debugging
- Search keywords within the Watch, Autos, and Locals windows while debugging to improve your ability to find objects or values.
- View a dropdown of format specifiers in the Watch, Autos, and Locals windows when inspecting data.
- Use a custom visualizer, now compatible with .NET Core.
- Debug very large applications with large numbers of modules and PDBs.
Source Control and Team Explorer
- Temporarily store changes so you can work on another task by using Team explorer’s Git tools support for Git stash.
- Check out the optional extension available on the Visual Studio Market Place, Pull Requests for Visual Studio, that integrates Pull Request reviews into Visual Studio.
- Use the new Azure DevOps work item experience that focuses on developer workflows, including user-specific work item views, creating a branch from a work item, searching for work items with #mentions, and inline editing.
Programming Languages
- Save time when writing C++ and XAML code by using Visual Studio IntelliCode, an optional extension that gives AI-assisted recommendations for your code.
- Learn about the F# language and tools open source contributions that have been incorporated. These changes have stabilized the existing F# feature set.
- Easily add Python virtual and conda environments using the Python Add Environment dialog.
Web Technologies
- Take advantage of the added support for working with .NET Core 3.0 projects.
- Check out CPU profiling of ASP.NET.
- Use snapshot debugger for .NET web apps running on Virtual Machines, Virtual Machine Scale Sets, and Azure Kubernetes Service.
Mobile Development with Xamarin
- Experience improvements to Xamarin.Android initial and incremental build performance.
- Take advantage of enhanced productivity in the Xamarin Android Designer.
- Check out the new property panel for Xamarin.Forms controls.
- Improve performance through the shortened the workload size for Xamarin and improved the Android emulator.
- Use Intellicode with Xamarin.Forms XAML.
Universal Windows Platform (UWP)
- Use the IntelliCode extension with XAML with the help of our added support.
You can download the preview from Microsoft here.
User forum
0 messages