I installed Visual Studio 2015, and tried to create a windows form, just as I used to do it in the VS2010. I could not find a Windows form for C#.
How can I create one? Do I need to install another version or do I need a plugin or something?
Screenshot: http://prntscr.com/8rwzyl
Informations about my Visual Studio: http://prntscr.com/8rx0a1
It seems you are opening new project in Blend. You have to use Visual Studio (not Blend).
Blend and Visual Studio are installed together with Visual Studio Community Edition 2015 . You probably run a wrong shortcut (which starts Blend).
The Checked Answer is correct however there is no explanation of how to solve this. I just came to the same problem, but figured it out. When searching in your file directory C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\Community\Common7\IDE
Then you can search .exe and it will come up with Blend and devenv. Or just scroll till you find devenv. devenv is the clickable application for visual studio community. :)
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how visual studio looks like for me at the moment
This question was previously asked and I did click the "Open Visual Studio Installer" link. When installing, I also check marked the ".NET Desktop develepment move and clicked "Modify" but still no luck. Does anyone have a solution to this or have run into the same problem?
The version I'm using is Microsoft Visual Studio 2017 Community version on a Windows 7 Enterprise OS.
If you look in \Common7\IDE\ProjectTemplates or \Common7\IDE\ItemTemplates, do you see any templates installed there?
Try re-registering your templates by issuing this command from the VS Command prompt:
devenv.exe /InstallVSTemplates
I just got Visual Studio for my Mac. Although in Beta, it seems nice. Unfortunately, I can't seem to figure out where VIM could be. I've searched the marketplace, but cannot load any file or extension into the IDE to enable VIM. I've checked the preferences in keyboard behavior, but nothing.
Does this IDE really not have one of the most essential tools?
Use VsVim with Visual Studio for Mac 8.4 or newer.
Original Answer
Shameless plug - Use my plugin :) https://github.com/nosami/XSVim/releases
It's now available in the Visual Studio for Mac extension gallery (under IDE extensions)
You can usually find a more recent version on the github releases page than in the VS for Mac addin gallery.
Visual Studio for Mac is not a direct port of Visual Studio for Windows. It's essentially an alpha-level rebranding (with a lot of work put into it but still) of another IDE called Xamarin Studio, itself essentially a rebranding of MonoDevelop.
As such, you shouldn't expect any compatibility with other tools in the Visual Studio ecosystem for the time being.
However, you can set up MacVim as an external tool if you really want, but you won't get any kind of integration per se:
What worked for me was downloading VsVim addin as *.mpack file from this page: https://addins.monodevelop.com/Project/Index/403. In my case the file was named Vim.Mac.VsVim-2.8.0.7.mpack.
After downloading the file, I opened Visual Studio for Mac, selected Visual Studio - Extensions from the menu to open the Extension Manager pop-up window, clicked Install from file... button and selected the downloaded *.mpack file.
Needed to restart Visual Studio to get the extension to work.
This was done in Visual Studio for Mac 8.7.8.
After last VisualStudio update (8.1.3 - a new Editor is in place) Vim doesn't work anymore.
At least for now, you need to mark a setting in Visual Studio that forces use of the old editor, as described in the extension's README here.
From that page:
You need to use VsVim. Also, for those who find this via google, the workaround steps are:
Uninstall the broken VsVim extension and restart Visual Studio for Mac.
[Download](https://addins.monodevelop.com/Stable/Mac/8.5/Vim.Mac.VsVim-2.8.0.5.mpack via your browser)
In VsMac, go to the Extensions pane and click Install From File. Navigate to your Downloads folder and select the .mpack file you downloaded.
For some reason the extension doesn't work right away. You need to restart Visual Studio for Mac.
Reference: link
I started a C# Windows Forms project in Visual Studio 2012. I added some shapes, and I think they are from a Visual Basic pack.
That was at school. At home I have Visual Studio 2015, and I thought I would continue with my project at home, but that's a problem, because when I open the solution and the project in Visual Studio 2015 I get many errors like this:
The referenced component 'Microsoft.VisualBasic.PowerPacks.Vs' could not be found.
So I installed the VB Powerpack, but that didn't help.
That package is not included in Visual Studio 2015. You have to download it here (you can find the instructions):
VisualBasic PowerPack missing from Visual Studio 2013?
I just installed Visual Studio 2015 and now want to start a new MonoGame project (C#, Windows DX).
I got MonoGame installed, as well as XNA.
The problem is that the templates are not showing up in the New Project dialogue.
On Visual Studio 2013, they showed up here, they are also nowhere to be found aynwhere else in the Project tree.
So I searched for the templates, they exist in the location where they should be:
C:\Users\<user>\Documents\Visual Studio 2015\Templates\ProjectTemplates\Visual C#\MonoGame
I tried running the devenv.exe /installvstemplates from the Visual Studio admin console, as well as devenv.exe /setup, for good measure.
After doing both several times, mixed with a few Visual Studio 2015 and Windows restarts, the project templates are still not showing up.
I also tried to clear the cache by deleting C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\VisualStudio and C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Local\Microsoft\VisualStudio\14.0, to no avail.
The MonoGame installer was customized to work with Visual Studio 2015, so I assume it should work somehow.
So, can anyone help me getting those project templates set up?
I found out why it wasn't working:
Apparently, the MonoGame installer puts the Templates in the wrong folder for Visual Studio 2015.
The correct folder for VS2015 is
C:\Users\user\Documents\Visual Studio 14\Templates\ProjectTemplates\Visual C#
The MonoGame installer installs to C:\Users\user\Documents\Visual Studio 2015\Templates\ProjectTemplates\Visual C#
So, when the folder MonoGame inside that folder gets moved to the first one, and the devenv.exe /installvstemplates command gets executed, the templates show up.
In case you work as standard user and run MonoGame setup as admin, MonoGane templates was installed only in Administrator account.
So I just make copy into my user \ProjectTemplates\Visual C#.
MonoGame Setup installation:
C:\Users\**Admin**\Documents\Visual Studio 2015\Templates\ProjectTemplates\Visual C#
Correct folder is under my user account:
C:\Users\**user**\Documents\Visual Studio 2015\Templates\ProjectTemplates\Visual C#
Then as answered above just run devenv.exe /installvstemplates from Developer Command Prompt for VS2015.
how do i get Unity3D for debugging the code, and Visual Studio 2013 which i have now to only script the code. Example: Like Flash Professional for debugging and FlashDevelop for scripting only.
My question is, how do i get the Unity3D link with Visual Studio 2013. I already searching around the internet, and had found that Unity3D only works with VisualStudio 2010.
I wrote a blog article on this awhile back on my blog HERE for Visual Studio.
However I will paste it here too:
How to use Visual Studio 2013
Recently Microsoft bought and re-released the popular Unity3D plugin UnityVS. The now renamed Visual Studio Tools for Unity plugin smooths the connection between Unity and Visual Studio and even allows one to perform debugging too! Download it here.
In Unity Editor go to Edit->Preferences->External Tools and In External Script Editor choose Browse from the drop down box.
Browse to and select C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 12.0\Common7\IDE\devenv.exe.
The External Script Editor should automatically show your selected editor as Visual Studio 2013.
That’s it! It should just work from that point on.
As an important update, I would like to notice, that former UnityVS (after Microsoft's acquisition of SyntaxTree) is now available for free as a rebranded Visual Studio 2013 Tools for Unity.
The versions for VS 2012 and VS 2010 are also available.
The integration of Unity3d and Visual Studio got simpler with latest Unity (version 5) and Visual Studio Tools. This is the current procedure.
To use Visual Studio as editor and debugger with Unity you must:
Install the Visual Studio Tools For Unity. For this download the package at http://unityvs.com (careful to get the version for the Visual Studio you are using) and import it (as is standard in Unity for packages) by going into Assets -> Import Package -> Custom Package and browse to the tools installation folder and pick the package.
Once installed in Unity you will get an additional menu Visual Studio Tools, go there and select "generate project files". Visual Studio will already be the default editor for your scripts.
This done, if you say put a breakpoint in Visual Studio, click on "Attach to Unity" in Visual Studio, and then run your Unity project, the process will stop at breakpoints in Visual Studio and allow variable inspection etc.
you can use unityvs VS plugin (but I'm not sure about current 2013 support, it's works with vs2012) http://unityvs.com/ - on windows it's works very well, but remote OSX debugging feature is not ready yet
I'd like to add to the fine answer given by Pietro Polsinelli, that for me, there was an extra step in his Step 1. And that is that, after installing Visual Studio Tools For Unity, I had to, in Unity, go to Assets->Import Package->Visual Studio 201X Tools and then click around on the menu bar until "Visual Studio Tools" showed up as an option. After that, I could Generate Project Files and Open in Visual Studio.
This enabled me to Attach to Unity in Visual Studio and debug.
None of these solutions worked for me. Renaming monodevelop just changed the default program to notepad++, and the next default program after that was simply notepad.
However, there is a known bug with Visual Studio 2013 (not sure if it was present in previous versions, or if it is present in the non-professional version) where if you try to open a C# file in visual studio, where Visual Studio is opened as administrator and Unity isn't, VS crashes.
I had to either run both programs (VS and Unity) as administrator, or not open VS as administrator (as per the solution found here: http://connect.microsoft.com/VisualStudio/feedback/details/597863/cannot-open-visual-studio-files-from-windows-explorer).
With Visual Studio You Can Use UnityVS Plugin But if You Use Monodevelop You Can Go To Run->Attach To Process.. And Connect The Debugger to Unity Editor It Work Perfectly.
To link Unity with Visual Studio, do the following:
Do this on Unity.
Go to file --> preferences --> external tools --> external script editor --> Choose visual studio.
If Visual Studio is not showing, you Re gonna have to browse Visual Studio by hand.
Then you open any script in the Unity Project window and Visual Studio should open the file.
I hope this is helpful.
Note that I am using Unity 2020.2 and Visual Studio 2019