Published: Developer Heritage Series Audience: Maintenance developers, enterprise IT, legacy system analysts Introduction While modern developers have moved on to Visual Studio 2022 and .NET 8, Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 (released April 12, 2010) represented a seismic shift in developer tooling. It introduced a rewritten WPF-based IDE, .NET Framework 4.0, and—most importantly—a suite of specialized Visual Studio 2010 Tools that extended far beyond the core C++/C# compiler.
You could write conditional property groups using intrinsic functions: microsoft visual studio 2010 tools
<PropertyGroup Condition="$(OS) == 'Windows_NT'"> <Platform>Win32</Platform> </PropertyGroup> The VS2010 Profiler supported both sampling and instrumentation. It could attach to running processes—unusual for the time. It could attach to running processes—unusual for the time
This article focuses on those specific tools, many of which remain in production environments today. 1.1. MSBuild (Version 4.0) MSBuild 4.0 introduced parallel builds, property functions, and better logging. Unlike later versions, VS2010’s MSBuild was tightly coupled with .NET 4.0’s assembly resolution. MSBuild (Version 4
Identify memory leaks in legacy Windows Forms apps. The Concurrency Visualizer (unique to VS2010/2012) showed thread contention and lock waits in a timeline view. 1.3. Static Code Analysis (FxCop integrated) Previously a separate tool, FxCop 10.0 ran inside the IDE as "Code Analysis." Rules were organized into rule sets (e.g., "Microsoft Security Rules").