Visual studio remote debugging port
The one downer is there's no way currently of finisihing a PR with a merge so you still have to do this in Azure DevOps.
![visual studio remote debugging port visual studio remote debugging port](https://i.stack.imgur.com/bkKbK.png)
This is great for being able to see the code directly in VS with context and the entire code file instead of the limited fragments in Azure DevOps. Again not directly part of 2019 and require a plugin but does add PR features in to VS. Code Reviews - Allows for Code Reviews to be handled directly in Visual Studio 2019.This is great for remote works as you can esentially pair program to fix issues without being physically together. Live Sharing - Another plugin but now integrated in 2019 allows for Live collaboration of code with others over the internet.Dashboard - A new dashboard that's more focused on getting started or resuming a project and some general UI tweaks have been added.A good step but it's nowhere near as comprehensive as Resharper. Code Cleanup - New profile based options have been added for cleaning up code and standardizing your code across projects/the solution.Essentally this is an AI trained replacement for Intellsense that learns based upon scanning GitHub projects and is supposed to be more intelligent on what it recommends. Intellicode - Not truely part of 2019 but mentioned in all the blogs.Refactorings - There's a load of new reactorings added in this version availible from Ctrl + including support for new C# features.Sadly it's does support camel case searching like Resharper does.
![visual studio remote debugging port visual studio remote debugging port](https://zhongchenzhou.files.wordpress.com/2012/05/remote-debug-3.png)
All classes and code are in this search so you can quickly navigate to files.
#Visual studio remote debugging port upgrade#
Visual Studio 2019 has been out about 6 weeks now and in this article I'm going to present both the best features to upgrade for, as well as my pick of my favourite extensions and I'm also going to cover woes around debugging in 2019.