Microsoft Announces Visual Studio 2019

The next major version of Microsoft’s flagship software development suite will be named Visual Studio 2019. And … we don’t really know much more about it.

“Our team is focused on introducing features that make every developer more productive,” Microsoft’s John Montgomery announced today. “Now, it’s time to start to look at what comes next: Visual Studio 2019.”

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Here’s what we do know so far.

  • Microsoft is “now in the early planning phase” for both Visual Studio 2019 and Visual Studio for Mac.
  • Visual Studio 2019 will be faster, more reliable, and more productive for individuals and teams. And it will be easier to use, and easier to get started with.
  • Visual Studio 2019 will provide more and better refactorings, better navigation, more capabilities in the debugger, faster solution load times, and faster builds.
  • Visual Studio 2019 previews will install side by side with Visual Studio 2017 and won’t require a major operating system upgrade. So it will be a simple, easy upgrade for developers.
  • Timing is … unclear. “We’ll say more in the coming months,” Montgomery says. “But be assured we want to deliver Visual Studio 2019 quickly and iteratively.” There’s no preview or early version to test yet.

With so little information, you may be wondering why Microsoft even announced the product. But Montgomery has a reason: Because Microsoft uses GitHub to develop Visual Studio, users are going to start seeing check-ins for the new product.

Given the release history, my guess is that Visual Studio 2019 will ship in late 2018. It seems like each release takes about 18 months, and Visual Studio 2017 first shipped in March 2017.

 

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Conversation 14 comments

  • slbailey1

    06 June, 2018 - 6:49 pm

    <p>Code Lens is in every version of Visual Studio/Visual code EXCEPT for Visual Studio Community. Microsoft should put Code Len in the Community version of Visual Studio!</p>

    • IanYates82

      Premium Member
      07 June, 2018 - 4:48 am

      <blockquote><a href="#282216"><em>In reply to slbailey1:</em></a></blockquote><p>I envied VS Enterprise, since I just had Premium, back in 2013. When they scrapped Premium and my MSDN subscription (that I get from being a Microsoft partner) was then eligible for Enterprise, I thought "yay for Code Lens".</p><p>It was neat at first.</p><p>But then it was just noise.</p><p>And then inaccurate for some of the issues it was showing from VSTS.</p><p>Then I turned it off and forgot it even existed as a feature :)</p><p><br></p><p>Don't worry – it's nice, but you're doing well without it.</p><p><br></p><p>if only they could emulate more of the ReSharper features I use I'd be super happy :)</p>

  • jimchamplin

    Premium Member
    07 June, 2018 - 2:53 am

    <p>I hope the installer is more flexible. Tools like the SDK need to install on a drive other than the system disk. Some of us run Windows from a smaller SSD and don’t need 25 GB of it gummed up with the damn SDK</p>

    • IanYates82

      Premium Member
      07 June, 2018 - 4:46 am

      <blockquote><a href="#282271"><em>In reply to jimchamplin:</em></a></blockquote><p>True. I've used symlinks in the past with great success to work around these sorts of things.</p>

  • nbplopes

    09 June, 2018 - 9:58 am

    <p>I still use 2015.</p>

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