Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 8th Jun 2012 17:15 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 521393
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RE: Comment by AnythingButVista
by MollyC on Fri 8th Jun 2012 23:24
in reply to "Comment by AnythingButVista"
The big problem with keeping VS Express 2012 a Metro-only product is that users would not have been able to target the much larger user base of Windws 7, XP and Vista. I'm glad that Microsoft came to their senses.
I agree with this decision, but note that Microsoft was going to keep VS2010 Express available and supported anyway, and hobbyists could use those to target pre-Windows 8 OS.
VS11 Express does have the advantage that the languages are merged into one package. VS2010 Express separated C#, VB, and C++ whereas they all come in the same SKU with VS11 Express (though still it looks like there'll be separate Express SKUs for targetting Metro and Desktop (and Web, but that was already separate in VS2010 Express).




Member since:
2008-08-27
The big problem with keeping VS Express 2012 a Metro-only product is that users would not have been able to target the much larger user base of Windws 7, XP and Vista. I'm glad that Microsoft came to their senses.