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While source code distribution and customization is the preferred methodology, some larger packages that would take many hours to compile on a typical desktop computer are also offered as pre-compiled binaries in order to ease installation; Upkg: Package management and build system based on Mono and XML specifications.
Visual Studio Code was first announced on April 29, 2015, by Microsoft at the 2015 Build conference. A preview build was released shortly thereafter. [13]On November 18, 2015, the project "Visual Studio Code — Open Source" (also known as "Code — OSS"), on which Visual Studio Code is based, was released under the open-source MIT License and made available on GitHub.
These text files can ultimately be any text format, such as code (for example C#), XML, HTML or XAML. T4 uses a custom template format which can contain .NET code and string literals in it, this is parsed by the T4 command line tool into .NET code, compiled and executed. The output of the executed code is the text file generated by the template ...
Every package manager for a source-based distribution – Portage, Sorcery, Homebrew, etc. – supports converting human-readable source code to binary executables and installing it. A few tools, such as Maak and A-A-P , are designed to handle both building and deployment, and can be used as either a build automation utility or as a package ...
The previous C++/CX (Component Extensions) language, which borrows some C++/CLI syntax, was introduced for writing and consuming WinRT components with less glue code visible to the programmer, relative to classic COM programming in C++, and imposes fewer restrictions relative to C++/CLI on mixing types.
Q# is available as a separately downloaded extension for Visual Studio, [15] but it can also be run as an independent tool from the command line or Visual Studio Code. Q# was introduced on Windows and is available on MacOS and Linux. [16]
The Visual F# tools include a Visual Studio-hosted read–eval–print loop (REPL) interactive console that can execute F# code as it is written. Visual Studio for Mac also fully supports F# projects. Visual Studio Code contains full support for F# via the Ionide extension. F# can be developed with any text editor.
The open-source transpiler SWC is used to transform and compile code into JavaScript usable by a browser. [30] Webpack, another open-source tool, is used to bundle the modules afterward, however it is currently being replaced with TurboPack. [31] All of these tools are used with npm in a terminal. [14]