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This would have been MUCH better had the alligator gotten lunch!
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You must have some very weird rubber duckies in your bathroom!
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I don't have any. Never have. I know one person (who is 23) that has over 900,000 rubber duckies (as of August 2014). Don't ask why. I don't know.
What do you get when you cross a joke with a rhetorical question?
The metaphorical solid rear-end expulsions have impacted the metaphorical motorized bladed rotating air movement mechanism.
Do questions with multiple question marks annoy you???
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I do C# and WPF work. I don't know what they did to the XAML parser in VS2015, but it flat out stinks. It blue squiggles pretty much everything intermittently, gives random / incorrect errors intermittently, etc. There are a few other nitpicks in the general environment, but this is pretty much unusable. Very disappointed. Any other WPF people seeing the same thing?
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Installed it last weekend, not sure I even want to fire it up based on the early feedback. I want to use it for the Xamarin integration but 99% of my work is in WPF shudder
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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I still use 2010
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
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Luddite
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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It works well and doesn't look like MS DOS 3.1
If it's not broken, fix it until it is
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If you like VS 2010 then 2013 is fine with the blue theme. I hated the default grey. But now I love VS 2013.
I've installed VS 2015 but not really used it yet besides running a Hello World console app. I always do that as a sanity check after an install.
Kevin
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I will keep using Windows 7, Office 2010, and VS2010 until Microsoft makes something better, but I am beginning to think that I will have to wait quite a long time...
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Kevin Marois wrote: I still use 2010
I developed my final year project in VS2010, it really works well.
Using VS2012 these days on work place, VS12 too is cool
Ain't intend to use VS2015 in future
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Brittle1618 wrote: Ain't intend
I don't intend...
Sorry, but that was bad.
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Oh thats perfectly alright
thanks for correction
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I converted to VS 2013 recently(from 2010).
It is well worth the upgrade.
“That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”
― Christopher Hitchens
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I was still using VS2008 for my own projects until recently. By choice.
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I'm just using it on my personal side project, so I probably use it maybe 3 hrs a week tops. If I had to use it 8 hrs a day for my work (especially if it was 99% WPF), I'd be hatin'... From one WPF guy to another, I would not use this in a professional environment right now. Too buggy still.
I do like the runtime "Spy++" type tool that can hyperlink to the element in the XAML... kind of cool, but also kind of kludge to use with the weird focus behavior. Switching properties at runtime? I guess if you're debugging something that's hard to repro...
I would call VS2013 "rock solid"... if that is the basis for a "10", I'd give this a 2 or 3 in the WPF areas.
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SledgeHammer01 wrote: I would not use this in a professional environment right now That is certainly not going to happen, EVERY tool goes through evaluation before it is allowed into the selected product list and they have no sense of urgency on any product.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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Like he needs to change his shirt. Gross.
What we got here is a failure to communicate
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That he is still batshit crazy.
What do you get when you cross a joke with a rhetorical question?
The metaphorical solid rear-end expulsions have impacted the metaphorical motorized bladed rotating air movement mechanism.
Do questions with multiple question marks annoy you???
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What has changed (major changes) between VS2012 and VS2015 which will force anyone to move to it? I am not talking about release notes but from a regular user point of view.
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I was looking forward to the support for C++11 in the C++ compiler. Given that it is developed by a different team, I hope that it's better than the C#/WPF stuff.
If you have an important point to make, don't try to be subtle or clever. Use a pile driver. Hit the point once. Then come back and hit it again. Then hit it a third time - a tremendous whack.
--Winston Churchill
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From my point of view, the integrated XAML debugging was something that was badly missing in earlier VS editions - I raised the original Connect request for this as a vNext feature back in 2008. Given how horrible and slow the 2015 experience is, I will continue to wait to use this feature.
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