Site Archive (Complete)
Windows/.NET
Email
Print
Reprint

add to:
Del.icio.us
Digg
Google
Spurl
Slashdot
Y! MyWeb
Blink
Furl
January 10, 2008
Inside Visual Studio 2008

Boosting developer productivity

(Page 1 of 6)
Dino Esposito
Visual Studio is Microsoft's flagship for developers, and Visual Studio 2008 is the first version of Visual Studio to support multiple versions of .NET.
Dino writes the ASP.NET-2-The-Max newsletter for DDJ. He can be contacted at weblogs.asp.net/despos/.


Since the release of the .NET Framework 1.0, Microsoft has committed to a made-to-measure programming environment with each new version of its managed framework. But for a number of reasons, this tradition was interrupted last year when .NET Framework 3.0 made its debut without a new version of Visual Studio. This year, however, .NET 3.5 comes out with a new programming environment—Visual Studio 2008.

Visual Studio is designed as a container environment that integrates the functionality of multiple visual designers for just about any supported type of application and component. This means you have ready-made templates for a variety of Windows and web application types, including Windows Forms, Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF), ASP.NET sites, and web services. In addition, Visual Studio 2008 offers ad hoc designers for creating workflows and Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) services. The characteristics of each output component are managed through projects, and in turn grouped in solution containers.

The true added value of Visual Studio—and perhaps the primary reason to consider upgrades—is the boost it gives to developer productivity. Dozens of wizards, smart and context-sensitive popup windows, effective debuggers, and visual designers are examples of facilities that may not necessarily make any code automatically smarter, but still help you focus on key points—skimming over chores, repetitive tasks, and overzealous procedures.

1 Visual Studio 2008 | 2 Multitarget Projects | 3 Some C# and VB Syntactic Sugar | 4 Richer Languages Beyond the Sugar | 5 LINQ Facilities | 6 Visual Studio 2008 Projects Next Page
DR. DOBB'S CAREER CENTER
Ready to take that job and shove it? open | close
Search jobs on Dr. Dobb's TechCareers
Function:

Keyword(s):

State:  
  • Post Your Resume
  • Employers Area
  • News & Features
  • Blogs & Forums
  • Career Resources

    Browse By:
    Location | Employer | City
  • Most Recent Posts:



    MICROSITES
    FEATURED TOPIC

    ADDITIONAL TOPICS

    INFO-LINK



     
    ♦ sponsored




    Related Sites: DotNetJunkies, SD Expo, SqlJunkies