Showing results for Visual Basic - Visual Basic Blog

Mar 11, 2020
239
6

Visual Basic support planned for .NET 5.0

.NET Team
.NET Team

We’ve heard your feedback that you want Visual Basic on .NET Core. Visual Basic in .NET 5 will support additional application types.

Nov 12, 2018
73
5

Visual Basic in .NET Core 3.0

Kathleen Dollard
Kathleen Dollard

Visual Basic in .NET Core 3   Update: March 12, 2020 This strategy described in this 2018 post has been replaced with the one in this post. Update: Oct 8, 2019 .NET Core 3.0 contains portions of the Visual Basic.NET Runtime (microsoft.visualbasic.dll) that do not depend on WinForms. Visual Basic.NET support for WinForms, WPF, and other...

Jun 5, 2018
3
3

Combining Angular, Visual Basic and .NET Core for developing modern web apps

Klaus Loeffelmann
Klaus Loeffelmann

Visual Basic supports .NET Core starting in Visual Studio 2017 Update 3 (15.3). This opens new possibilities for new applications and modernizing existing applications. Preserving domain-specific code when modernizing applications allows step-wise conversions, decreases cost, and avoids disruptions. This post covers using Visual Basic ASP.NET Core ...

Oct 2, 2017
2
2

Roslyn Primer – Part I: Anatomy of a Compiler

Anthony D. Green [MSFT]
Anthony D. Green [MSFT]

So, you’ve heard that VB (and C#) are open source now and you want to dive in and contribute. If you haven’t spent your life building compilers, you probably don’t know where to start. No worries, I’ll walk you through it. This post is the first of a series of blog posts focused on the Roslyn codebase. They’re intended as a primer for ...

Sep 7, 2017
0
1

Dependency Injection with Visual Basic .NET – Part 2 – IoC Containers

VBTeam
VBTeam

This post was authored by guest blogger André Obelink, a Visual Basic MVP, and published by the VBTeam on his behalf. In my previous post, I wrote about the basics of dependency injection. I explained the technique to define an interface and injecting the dependencies to a client object. These dependencies contain the real implementation of that ...

Aug 28, 2017
1
1

Dependency Injection with Visual Basic .NET – Part 1

VBTeam
VBTeam

This post was authored by guest blogger André Obelink, a Visual Basic MVP, and published by the VBTeam on his behalf. In this first blog post of a series of two, I explain what dependency injection (DI) is and why you might want to use this design principle in your software. The target audience of this post is the junior / medium experienced ...

Aug 14, 2017
0
0

New for Visual Basic: .NET Standard Class Libraries and the dotnet CLI!

Anthony D. Green [MSFT]
Anthony D. Green [MSFT]

Visual Studio 2017 15.3 Preview 1 included templates for VB class libraries targeting .NET Standard class libraries and for .NET Core console apps. With the release of .NET Core 2.0 today those templates go-live. The .NET Standard You can use the built-in templates to create cross-platform command-line apps, as well as creating and testing cross-...

Jun 13, 2017
0
2

Visual Basic and Cross-Platform: Mobile Apps with VB, Xamarin, and .NET Standard!

Klaus Loeffelmann
Klaus Loeffelmann

How would you like it if you could create a Console App in Visual Basic and run it on Linux? Or running the same Xamarin.Forms-App written in Visual Basic on an iPhone, and Android and a Windows Tablet? Welcome to the world of cross-platform development, which from Visual Studio 2017 Update 3 on – thanks to .NET Standard and .NET Core – is now ...

May 21, 2017
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Introduction to (Live) Unit Testing in Visual Basic… [updated for VS 2017 Update 3 Preview 3]

Klaus Loeffelmann
Klaus Loeffelmann

...and Why My Grandma Invented the Concept! Meet late Grandma Grete Schindler. I'd like to introduce you to my grandma, because this post will be about the essence and purpose of unit testing in Visual Basic, and Granny Grete basically invented the concept of unit testing. Yes, she really did, I kid you not – she was a very wise woman! ...

Apr 10, 2017
2
0

Easy Async and Await for VBs Part 1, or…

Klaus Loeffelmann
Klaus Loeffelmann

...letting your code do absolutely nothing! We’ve all been there, one way or the other. Either as users of an app or as the developer to whom users complained to: When a typical Win32 app is waiting for an operation to complete, we often get to see something like this: In discussions about how to get a handle on such scenarios there are all ...

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