After beta’s and one RC release, starting today, we can get our hands on Visual Studio 2010 RTM. Just hours ago, Microsoft held a keynote on the release of their flagship IDE, Visual Studio 2010. This release coincides with the release of .NET 4.0 and of course Silverlight 4, which has its official launch event tomorrow. This marks probably the largest release ever for developers from Microsoft.
I need it badly
Visual Studio 2010 is like honey, developers swarm to it. It’s understandable that you want to get your hands on the bits. Where can you get them?If you’re an MSDN subscriber, you’re in luck, as you can get all the bits from the MSDN subscription site. (http://msdn.microsoft.com/subscriptions)If you are not, you have the following options:
Why you need it
If I wanted to make a list of reasons why you should be upgrading to Visual Studio 2010, I would be up all night I think. Since it’s quite late already, I’m going to make an all-but-complete list with my top features that make Visual Studio 2010 an not-to-miss upgrade. (For the complete list – you’re warned, it’s very complete – take a look here: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb386063(VS.100).aspx)
The IDE looks really stylish!
Upon opening Visual Studio 2010 for the first time, you’ll immediately notice that something happened… Something big. No longer the traditional grey interface, but an exciting new look for the place you spend all your development hours in. Built entirely in WPF, the new shell offers plenty of extension points so you can make it feel even more like home.
New IDE features
I personally like the Navigate To function a lot (I blogged about it yesterday here: Visual Studio 2010 Tip- Navigate to functionality). Another one I like is the zoom in/out we can now do in the code editor. This is a real life-saver when doing demos on stage or when showing someone some code. Simply keep CTRL key pressed and rotate that mouse wheel of yours. For people who work on multiple monitors, Visual Studio now supports this much better!
Some other nice features:
New framework and languages
Visual Studio 2010 comes packed with new releases.
I want more
Not enough reading material for your brain? A free ebook is made available “Moving to Visual Studio 2010” here.
Warnings here!
Something to watch out for: currently, the Windows Phone 7 tools do not work with the RTM version of 2010. Read more on this here: http://forums.silverlight.net/forums/t/175181.aspx
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