Microsoft has released a new version of source-code editor Visual Studio Code that runs natively on Apple Silicon Macs like the MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, and Mac mini models with Apple M1 chips. The ...
Microsoft is retiring Visual Studio for Mac after a years-long effort to get the IDE up to par with the Windows version. Finally, today Microsoft threw in the towel, switching its Mac ambitions to VS ...
Unlock the full InfoQ experience by logging in! Stay updated with your favorite authors and topics, engage with content, and download exclusive resources. This article dives into the happens-before ...
Microsoft’s open-source code editor, Visual Studio Code, has been updated this week with a great enhancement for M1 Mac users. The tool is now fully compatible with the Apple Silicon platform, which ...
Microsoft on Wednesday announced the coming "retirement" of its Visual Studio for Mac IDE product. Support will officially end in one year, on Aug. 31, 2024. However, Microsoft promised developers ...
The newly shipped Visual Studio 2017 for Mac 7.7 features improved IntelliSense and supports newer versions of .NET Core 2.2 and Azure Functions, among other improvements. The release comes as ...
VS Code 1.105 also introduces a built-in MCP server marketplace and allows users to resume recent Copilot Chat sessions.
Microsoft has announced it is retiring Visual Studio for Mac and that support for the latest version, 17.6, will continue for another year, until August 31, 2024. During the support period, users of ...
In an effort to redirect its resources elsewhere, Microsoft has begun the process of retiring Visual Studio for Mac IDE. According to Microsoft, Visual Studio for Mac 17.6 will continue to be ...
Microsoft has announced that a public preview for its Visual Studio 2022 will be coming soon. Along with a number of changes and enhancements, the latest app development software will arrive with an ...
Microsoft plans to launch a preview of Visual Studio for Mac this week at its Connect() conference, according to an MSDN Magazine article which Microsoft published and then pulled. The article ...