News

Ajax Control Toolkit Streamlines, Drops .NET 3.5 Support

DevXpress releases Version 15.1 with numerous bug fixes, but there's also a streamlining of features and weeding out of experimental features and functions.

A few weeks ago, we told you about Microsoft relinquishing development of the Ajax Control Toolkit to DevExpress, a Microsoft Partner. Now comes this blog post from Pranav Rastogi, a Microsoft Program Manager who works with ASP.NET and Azure, who lists a number of improvements in the most recent release.

Version 15.1, as the incremental update numbering implies, is a streamlining of features to move the solution forward. Installation improvements mean a simpler process in which it "automatically registers the ASP.NET AJAX Control Toolkit components into the Toolbox of all available Visual Studio versions that you have installed on your system," according to a separate post listing a number of new and improved features.

The tool kit's code base has also been simplified. No longer will there be various assemblies for specific .NET versions. Instead, there's just a single assembly, but that also means the group will no longer be supporting .NET Framework 3.5.

And there are a number of other key updates: dependencies on third-party packages extracted to separate packages; support for Visual Studio Web Forms templates; paring of unused and old code and cleanup of source code tree; removal of experimental and malfunctioning features, to name a few.

This version also includes a number of bug fixes, which are listed on the CodePlex site here.

About the Author

You Tell 'Em, Readers: If you've read this far, know that Michael Domingo, Visual Studio Magazine Editor in Chief, is here to serve you, dear readers, and wants to get you the information you so richly deserve. What news, content, topics, issues do you want to see covered in Visual Studio Magazine? He's listening at [email protected].

comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Microsoft Revamps Fledgling AutoGen Framework for Agentic AI

    Only at v0.4, Microsoft's AutoGen framework for agentic AI -- the hottest new trend in AI development -- has already undergone a complete revamp, going to an asynchronous, event-driven architecture.

  • IDE Irony: Coding Errors Cause 'Critical' Vulnerability in Visual Studio

    In a larger-than-normal Patch Tuesday, Microsoft warned of a "critical" vulnerability in Visual Studio that should be fixed immediately if automatic patching isn't enabled, ironically caused by coding errors.

  • Building Blazor Applications

    A trio of Blazor experts will conduct a full-day workshop for devs to learn everything about the tech a a March developer conference in Las Vegas keynoted by Microsoft execs and featuring many Microsoft devs.

  • Gradient Boosting Regression Using C#

    Dr. James McCaffrey from Microsoft Research presents a complete end-to-end demonstration of the gradient boosting regression technique, where the goal is to predict a single numeric value. Compared to existing library implementations of gradient boosting regression, a from-scratch implementation allows much easier customization and integration with other .NET systems.

  • Microsoft Execs to Tackle AI and Cloud in Dev Conference Keynotes

    AI unsurprisingly is all over keynotes that Microsoft execs will helm to kick off the Visual Studio Live! developer conference in Las Vegas, March 10-14, which the company described as "a must-attend event."

Subscribe on YouTube