With this release, we’ve enabled the ability to change your environment settings after creation. One thing we’ve been considering is how we provide the power you need at the specific times you need it. Try it out with a project today and let us how it goes! NET Core SDKs, and improved Python support. Based on your feedback we’ve expanded our default environment configuration to include PowerShell, Azure CLI, native debugging for Go and C++, updated. In our initial release, we did our best to provide a default environment setup that addressed some of the most popular development scenarios, in case your repository didn’t have a specified setup. Additionally, you can also specify a GitHub pull request or branch URL, allowing you to jump directly into a pull request review or particular branch after the environment is created.Įnvironment creation leveraging a Dockerfile with new progress indicators. To give you greater control over your environment setup and improve repeatability, we’ve enabled support for Docker images and Dockerfiles and provided more insight into environment creation with our new progress screen. Take environment customization to the next levelĮnvironments are as unique as the projects within them and we heard from many of you that our current customization options weren’t enough. Your feedback in surveys, phone calls, and on our GitHub have been invaluable to us in defining and prioritizing these updates. Since then, the Visual Studio Online team hasn’t slowed down and we’re excited to bring you several new features ranging from enhanced environment configuration with custom Dockerfile support to enabling setting changes to environments. Last November, we unveiled the public preview of Visual Studio Online, which provides managed, on-demand development environments that can be accessed from anywhere using either Visual Studio Code, Visual Studio IDE ( in private preview), or the included browser-based editor.
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