Book Image

Visual Studio 2019 Tricks and Techniques

By : Paul Schroeder, Aaron Cure
Book Image

Visual Studio 2019 Tricks and Techniques

By: Paul Schroeder, Aaron Cure

Overview of this book

Visual Studio 2019 (VS 2019) and Visual Studio Code (VS Code) are powerful professional development tools that help you to develop applications for any platform with ease. Whether you want to create web, mobile, or desktop applications, Microsoft Visual Studio is your one-stop solution. This book demonstrates some of the most sophisticated capabilities of the tooling and shows you how to use the integrated development environment (IDE) more efficiently to be more productive. You’ll begin by gradually building on concepts, starting with the basics. The introductory chapters cover shortcuts, snippets, and numerous optimization tricks, along with debugging techniques, source control integration, and other important IDE features that will help you make your time more productive. With that groundwork in place, more advanced concepts such as the inner workings of project and item templates are covered. You will also learn how to write quality, secure code more efficiently as well as discover how certain Visual Studio features work 'under the hood'. By the end of this Visual Studio book, you’ll have learned how to write more secure code faster than ever using your knowledge of the extensions and processes that make developing successful solutions more enjoyable and repeatable.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Section 1: Visual Studio IDE Productivity Essentials
9
Section 2: Customizing Project Templates and Beyond
13
Section 3: Leveraging Extensions for the Win

Summary

This was the final chapter on an advanced productivity feature of Visual Studio, deploying multiproject templates. In this chapter, we gave an overview of a sample client-server application, CitySelector, which consists of a WPF application retrieving data from a Web API serving sample data. We walked through a recipe for creating VSIX deployment packages. The ingredients we covered included a deployment project, a template project, and a custom code project.

By implementing the IWizard interface, we were able to launch a form during new project creation to gather user input for use by our Web API project template. Finally, we rounded off the chapter with information on how to publish and distribute project templates in the Visual Studio Marketplace. As highlighted in the last section, you can also create project templates for use with the dotnet new command. These can even be packaged as NuGet files for easy installation.

Not every developer will find an immediate use...