![]() From updates to the new external source feature, which make it easier to load symbols for libraries outside your project, to new features like dependent breakpoints, for configuring additional breakpoints after another breakpoint is first hit. From updates to the attach to process dialog where you can now select processes by using a window picker. The Preview 4 release also has a number of improvements for debugging. The performance team is planning a blog dedicated to performance improvements, so stay tuned. ![]() Other scenarios where we’ve improved performance include C++ IntelliSense performance improvements with a ~12% speedup for semantic colorization, optimizations to symbol database processing, and an almost 2x speedup for expanding C++ items in the solution explorer. For example, find in files is now as much as 3x faster when searching large solutions such as Orchard Core. In Preview 4, we’ve focused on improving the performance of several key features. ![]() In previous blog posts, we’ve talked about how our move to 64bit has led to significant improvements in scalability. If there are elements that don’t work well, you are welcome to share feedback with us by creating an issue in the GitHub repo or create a Pull Request with the changes you’d like to see.A focus area for Visual Studio 2022 is improving the scalability and performance of Visual Studio. You now have access to a wide range of themes in the Visual Studio family and can match your Visual Studio and Visual Studio Code themes. It’s a tool that converts all the tokens you’ve specified. You can give the theme converter a try by downloading from the GithHub repository. The converted themes look their best with C# and C++ repos, and other languages may use the fallback colors if they are not available in the theme. ![]() Converted themes are most compatible with Visual Studio 2022 Preview 3 and above. We’ve made efforts to ensure that even theme elements that are undefined will still be usable, through a fallback logic, which improves the appearance of the theme. ![]() The Theme Converter tool converts color tokens from a VS Code theme and applies them to Visual Studio. If you’re a VS Code theme author, you can now easily share your theme with a new range of users by packaging and uploading your theme to the Marketplace as well! Using the Theme Converter tool Using this tool, you can now convert any VS Code theme for use in Visual Studio 2022! This gives you access to a new range of themes inside the Visual Studio family, and if you use both Visual Studio and Visual Studio Code, you now have the extra flexibility to use the same theme for both platforms. Today, we’d like to share with you a bit more detail about this converter tool, and how you can convert your own theme as well!Ĭonvert VS Code Themes to Use in Visual Studio Last week, we shared a collection of new community themes created using this tool. We’ve been testing out a Theme Converter that helps theme authors convert their Visual Studio Code themes to work in VS. We want developers to have the flexibility to personalize their Visual Studio IDE to fit their individual preferences, and themes are an important component for achieving this goal. ![]()
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