Visual Studio 2022 features an array of improvements during each major and minor release, and we know that you may not have a lot of time to find and try them after each update. We also heard from the developer community that you’d like an easy way to keep up with new Visual Studio capabilities that could be useful in your day-to-day work.
That’s why we’ve put together a selection of features for you to play with, right within Visual Studio during each release. What’s New in Visual Studio is available in Visual Studio 17.3 Preview 1 and 2 in English locales.
Try new Visual Studio features
After updating Visual Studio, a selection of new features will appear. Select a feature for further detail.
From there, you’ll be able to try the given feature, either by selecting “Enable” or if it is already on by default, you’ll be able to learn more about its capabilities.
After you’ve closed the What’s New feature, you may find it again under the Help > What’s New menu item.
Share your thoughts
Please feel free to give the latest features a try and let us know what you think, by sharing feedback on Developer Community or voting on a request that resonates.
I’m going to have to agree with Ian Marteens. New features are great as long as they don’t mess up old features. I am having a nightmare with 17.2.5. Sometime over the past month or so, the number of “VS is Busy” / Hangs have steadily increased. Also, random Docker errors which go away after exiting VS and restarting. This is code that has worked for years. We...
Funny thing, when you first start coding, if something is not working, you assume it is caused by something other than yourself. After many years of coding, you figure that every time there is an unexplainable issue, it is probably your fault. After trying everything I could imagine, I ran “repair,” and all issues magically disappeared. New features are great, but not so much if other thinks are broken during updates.
You speak about OLD times when company worried about QUALITY of product! Now a whole world shifted to "copro-economy" - produce rubbish and sell it more frequent. It happen everywhere, from cars till software. Nowadays MS doesn't care anymore about quality - look at Win10/11 and cry! Same story w VS - now when I see a bug, I AM SURE it's bug from indians which hired by MS for plate of curry.
Too much...
Not on 17.2.5 it isn’t. No what’s new anywhere.
Not finding it in 17.3 either.
I never get used to the rude way that some people have to comment here. Don’t care about the rude reviews. That kind of person doesn’t deserve attention. By the way, nice new functionality!
Good Evening Kosovo Sir/Lady, Amazing Feautures Available on @VisualStudio2022. I’m excited , C’mon Developers,
” FANTASTIC ”
” DRIVEN AL “
Please add a way to remotely debug .NET apps on Linux that combines building, publishing, running, and attaching in one seemless step, in the same way it works in Visual Studio 2008 when remotely debugging Windows CE devices. Thank you.
Slowly popping up on social media nd forums for some that after updating to 17.2.4 every file and every line of every project has red squiggles. The solution builds perfectly, no errors, but the IDE analyzer would appear to not be honoring implicit usings or something like that. "Predefined type System.Object is not defined or imported", same for Text and Task .
One fix seems to be to manually delete \bin, \obj of EVERY project...
Will a Linux version ever see the light of day?
Never. VS is built using wpf afaik and wpf has strong dependency on windows to the point it is infeasible to port it to any other OS. The best you can get is to move to VS Code but thats not the same obviously.
Visual Studio also runs on [Mac](https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/vs/mac/). Clearly WPF isn't the issue here. It is more likely the ROI.
VS Code is the non-Windows preferred IDE. There is a discussion (including feedback request for Linux) [here](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/answers/questions/177175/visual-studio-for-linux.html).
Another alternative is [Github Codespaces](https://github.com/features/codespaces) which is a cloud-based IDE. It has merged with what was called Visual Studio Online/Codespaces to allow for IDE development in the cloud.
Quick note: Visual Studio on Mac was rebranded from Xamarin Studio. I’d imagine they could port over that version to linux with enough development time and budget compared to VS on Windows, but given how much they advertise WSL it’s rather unlikely.
What I don’t understand that a GA workload like Maui is part of a 17.3 preview product???
Apart from that I love the what’s new feature and should have been there ages ago … but keep solving bugs 😜
And what about fixing some ridiculous but annoying bugs? For example VS does not install if user name contains unicode characters. The installer just silently ends. Try user name Matěj.
Awesome
I love the new start page. VisualStudio is always changing (usually for the better!) and having this start page will really help me keep up. Thank you for listening to community requests to make new features easier to discover.
Oh, is there a new start page? Probably I was so pissed off after reinstalling that I didn’t pay attention to it. Next time, I promise.