![]() So day 1, Saturday after some initial pain of getting a XUnit test runner up and running it looks like I’m ready to go. Most solutions can be loaded in both VS10 and VS11 without migration So the perf and memory footprint improvements of VS11 have a special appeal to me. At home where I do development on my OSS project RequestReduce, I work on a 5 year old Lenovo T60P laptop. Net 4.0 so why not just dev on it full time to enjoy the full, rich dogfooding experience. The product seems stable and everyone seem to feel comfortable installing it side by side with VS 10. As a member of the team that owns the Visual Studio Gallery and the MSDN Code Samples Gallery and their integration with the Visual Studio IDE, I’ve been viewing bits hot out of the oven for some time now. ![]() ![]() This last weekend I installed the beta bits on my day to day development environments. So it seems serendipitous that I write this on the eve of the Visual Studio 11 launch. ![]() If you are interested in learning some details about targeting different frameworks, some nice IL debugging tips or what that means in an upgrade like 4.5 that is “in place” or does not officially change the runtime version along with some techniques for debugging such interesting scenarios, then read on. ![]()
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January 2023
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