Microsoft shared the first public preview of the Visual Studio 2022 IDE will arrive sometime this summer in a blog post today.Īlong with increased speed and cleaner design, the app will be 64-bit, more lightweight, and offer a better experience to collaborate remotely. Along with a number of changes and enhancements, the latest app development software will arrive with an all-new Mac version that includes a native UI, improved performance and reliability, support for macOS accessibility features, and more. The basic instructions for configuring C++ debugging are here: Īnd here is an example launch.Microsoft has announced that a public preview for its Visual Studio 2022 will be coming soon. I know the original post was about Visual Studio not Visual Studio Code, but this seemed to be the most active forum thread about VS Code so I’m doing my brain dump here! Sorry for turning this into a VS Code thread. Update #2: I have gotten debugging working too. "-project", "/path/to/your/project.xcodeproj", "-alltargets", "-configuration", "Debug", "SYMROOT=~/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData" I want xcodebuild to use the same path as xcode. otherwise it will put its temporary build files in the project directory. note that I set a SYMROOT that matches xcode's default derived data path, Compiling the Debug configuration is fast. UPDATE: xcodebuild was only slow because I was compiling the Release configuration. For now I will keep using Xcode for compiling For example, if I make a minor code change then the project will recompile in Xcode in a second or two, but xcodebuild seems to do a full recompile, which takes 20-30 seconds. Unfortunately xcodebuild’s build times are much slower than Xcode’s, and I don’t know why. This lets you compile without leaving VS Code It uses xcodebuild on the command line, which is equivalent to compiling from the Xcode application. I have also configured a build task as described here. The C/C++ plugin required some minor configuration to let it find Juce’s modules, so that Intellisense works, as described here. Seems good to me, but I’m not very experienced with C++ so I’m afraid I can’t give a detailed comparison with Xcode. I have been using the C/C++ plugin for vscode mentioned above. Until now I have been using Xcode, but I am so used to VS Code that it is a pain switching back and forth. I have been using VS Code for about 6 months for my day job (front end web dev), and am trying it out for Juce/C++ projects.
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