#VisualStudio2022

Visual Studio 2022 17.12 will go EOL on July 14th

Visual Studio 2022 17.12 was released on May 12th, 2024, which brought support for .NET 9.0 that was released on the same day. It was one of the long term support releases, which will end this year.

On July 14th, support for this version of Visual Studio 2022 17.12 will become end of life. Updates for this version will no longer be released, and no new security updates will be done afterwards.

Meanwhile, the latest version of Visual Studio 2022 is 17.14, which will become end of life on January 13th, 2032. This is only six years away from the full retirement of Visual Studio 2022 that was released on November 8th, 2021.

If you’re still running this version of Visual Studio 2022, you’ll need to upgrade to version 17.14 using the Visual Studio Installer to benefit from the latest updates, if you prefer stability. Additionally, if you can afford the costs of migration to Visual Studio 2026, you can upgrade to this version.

#Net #C #dotnet #news #Tech #Technology #update #visualStudio #visualStudio2022 #vs #vs2022

Visual Studio 2022 17.10 will go EOL on January 13th

Visual Studio 2022 17.10 was released on May 21st, 2024, which brought GitHub Copilot straight to the IDE to make the experience more seamless. It was one of the long term support releases, which will end this year.

On January 13th, support for this version of Visual Studio 2022 17.10 will become end of life. Updates for this version will no longer be released, and no new security updates will be done afterwards.

Meanwhile, the latest version of Visual Studio 2022 is 17.14, which will become end of life on January 13th, 2032. This is only six years away from the full retirement of Visual Studio 2022 that was released on November 8th, 2021.

If you’re still running this version of Visual Studio 2022, you’ll need to upgrade to version 17.14 using the Visual Studio Installer to benefit from the latest updates, if you prefer stability. Additionally, if you can afford the costs of migration to Visual Studio 2026, you can upgrade to this version.

#Net #C #dotnet #news #Tech #Technology #update #visualStudio #visualStudio2022 #vs #vs2022

Taco Davedave@puz.fun
2025-11-04

Anyone with experience in #VisualStudio2022 with #EndpointsExplorer know if it’s specific to certain project types or if it should work in any project type? I’ve converted a #NodeJS app to use .esproj and live in a solution with other projects, and I’d like to try adding endpoints, but Endpoint Explorer doesn’t seem to see my .http files or http-client.env.json config, or show any UI other than a reload button. Wondering if it’s just me or if it’s like this for everyone.

2025-10-29

I am impressed by the frequent updates to Visual Studio Community 2022. Once a week, more or less. The last one (17.14.18 -> 17.14.19) has just "Copilot Language Server recognized as a threat by McAfee antivirus" in its release notes, hehe, that is probably ironic. (I am not using any Copilot features.)

#VisualStudio2022

2025-10-13

I went to use a visual studio extension today that helped upgrade older versions to newer ones, it was free, worked offline, and did a great job of converting projects while providing a helpful report of what was changed and other notes about the process. A recent update to visual studio has completely disabled this functionality and added a "Modernize" option that only works with a paid Copilot subscription. Terrible enshittification of a product, but while reading about a possible workaround, I found a nuclear take with one of the worst analogies I've ever seen anyone try to make:
developercommunity.visualstudi

#VisualStudio #VisualStudio2022 #Microsoft #Copilot #DotNet #enshittification

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