Earlier this month, we released version 7.4 of Visual Studio for Mac, our IDE for developers on macOS who are building mobile, web, and cloud apps. Today, we’re announcing the first preview of Visual Studio for Mac version 7.5, which you can get by changing the updater channel in Visual Studio for Mac to use the Beta channel. In this release, the top highlights include:
- The Print Shop for Mac’s creator, Broderbund, also makes another greeting card program we reviewed: PrintMaster Platinum v8. The Print Shop handles different graphic design projects than PrintMaster Platinum, including brochures, business cards and calendars.
- Description: QSL Studio is a program used to design and print Amateur Radio QSL cards for Mac OS X 10.5+ QSL Studio is a document based application and as such allows you to work.
- ACDSee Photo Studio is a complete RAW workflow, image editing and library organization tool. While it doesn't have a devoted professional following as yet, it aims to be a complete solution for professional users as well as more casual and semi-professional photographers.
- With Print Artist Platinum 25, you can send messages for all occasions, and you can do it in so many different ways. If you are a traditionalist, you can send printed cards with your own customized envelopes through the postal service.
- Adding new editor support for Razor, JavaScript, and TypeScript.
- Improving Azure Functions development with support for the .NET Core Preview SDK and with the introduction of new Azure Functions templates.
- Adding support for the latest releases of .NET Core and C#, with .NET Core 2.1 Preview and C# version 7.2.
- Making it easier for Xamarin.Forms developers to build apps using .NET Standard.
- Continuing to improve IDE performance and stability.
See the full Visual Studio for Mac 7.5 Preview release notes to learn about all the changes that made it into this release.
Print studio free download - FotoSlate Photo Print Studio, Magix Xtreme Print Studio, Print Studio, and many more programs. Best Video Software for the Mac How To Run MacOS High Sierra. VS for Mac Product Manager Rajen Kishna replied: 'Our goal with Visual Studio for Mac is to create a native IDE for Mac users with workloads that make sense on macOS. That means 'desktop app' development will target macOS and Visual Studio (on Windows) can be used to target Windows.
Web Development with Razor, JavaScript, and TypeScript

Editor support for Razor, JavaScript, and TypeScript have been some of the top web developer requests we have heard. In this release, new editors are being introduced for each of these languages.
With official support for Razor, you now have syntax highlighting and IntelliSense while editing your C# in .cshtml files.
In previous releases, our JavaScript editor included support for syntax highlighting and colorization. Now, it’s rewritten to provide smarter colorization, IntelliSense, brace completion, and the rest of the core editor experience. At the same time, support is being added for TypeScript editing; providing the same colorization, IntelliSense, and editor experience as JavaScript.
Behind the scenes, these three were made possible thanks to a lot of hard work from the Roslyn and Visual Studio JavaScript tooling teams – and Visual Studio for Mac re-uses source code from these editing experiences as they appear in Visual Studio 2017 on PC.
Build serverless solutions with Azure Functions
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Last year, we introduced preview support for Azure Functions – enabling development of Azure Functions using C# and .NET with full debugger tooling – based on the Mono runtime. Now, a new Functions template dialog is included, along with support for the .NET Core Preview SDK.
Azure Functions templates enable you to quickly create new functions using the most common triggers and templates. You can access these by creating a new Azure Functions project, right-clicking on your project, and choosing the Add > Add Function… menu.
.NET Core 2.1 and C# 7.2
Visual Studio for Mac version 7.5 Preview 1 is the first release supporting the .NET Core 2.1 Preview SDK. You can read all about the .NET Core 2.1 Preview release in the announcement blog post. Some of the top improvements: faster build performance, closing gaps in ASP.NET Core and EF Core, better compatibility with .NET Framework, General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and Security compliance. We’ve also added support for C# 7.2.
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.NET Standard and Xamarin.Forms
Mobile developers will be happy to see that .NET Standard Library projects are now a fully supported option for sharing code between platforms when building Xamarin.Forms solutions. This release brings numerous bug fixes to improve the .NET Standard developer experience (see the release notes).
Improving performance and reliability
Finally, we continue our push to improve performance and reliability in the IDE. This release focuses on improving IDE startup time, which has decreased by as much as 50% for some users. We’re also fixing top issues and crashes as they come into the Developer Community site – please keep the feedback coming! Some of the top fixes in this release:
- VS 2017 for Mac crashes every time on Quit (first reported by “AI Borns”)
- VS for Mac crashes almost instantly (first reported by “Alexander Litvak”)
Feedback
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We can’t do this alone and we need your help to make the product better! Please try out the Visual Studio for Mac version 7.5 Preview 1 release by installing Visual Studio for Mac now and switching to the Beta update channel in the IDE. Share your comments and bug reports with us on the Developer Community site; you can get there quickly by using the Help > Report Problem… menu from the IDE. We also welcome feature suggestions on our UserVoice site, which you can also access from the Help > Provide a Suggestion… menu.
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| Miguel de Icaza, Distinguished Engineer, Mobile Developer Tools Miguel is a Distinguished Engineer at Microsoft, focused on the mobile platform and creating delightful developer tools. With Nat Friedman, he co-founded both Xamarin in 2011 and Ximian in 1999. Before that, Miguel co-founded the GNOME project in 1997 and has directed the Mono project since its creation in 2001, including multiple Mono releases at Novell. Miguel has received the Free Software Foundation 1999 Free Software Award, the MIT Technology Review Innovator of the Year Award in 1999, and was named one of Time Magazine’s 100 innovators for the new century in September 2000. |