News

What Do Devs Want for VS 2022? The Top 10 Feature Requests

After Microsoft addressed a top developer feature request with this week's sneak peek at the upcoming 64-bit Visual Studio 2022, what else is in the works?

To find out, we checked out the Visual Studio top feature requests on the Developer Community feedback site, where Microsoft also collects bug reports and other problems.

Top 10 Developer Community Visual Studio Feature Requests
[Click on image for larger view.] Top 10 Developer Community Visual Studio Feature Requests (source: Microsoft).

As measured by community votes, a "Visual Studio x64 implementation" was No. 6 on the list, just moved on April 19 (when VS 2022 was announced) from "Under Review" to "On Roadmap." The roadmap was last updated Jan. 28, 2021.

64-bit Moved to Roadmap
[Click on image for larger view.] 64-bit Moved to Roadmap (source: Microsoft).

That move, in a nearly hell-freezes-over moment, was greeted with comments like "Holy Guacamole!"

Other top-voted items (with 100-vote threshold) on the roadmap include:

Note that many requests were placed on the roadmap much earlier than the 64-bit item. Many date back to Oct. 8 when they were migrated over from the old UserVoice site. Some feature requests received thousands of votes on that old site, so the Developer Community votes don't necessarily reflect the total of all votes that were received. For example, the "Allow multiple Git repositories to be active at once" item listed above was migrated over with 1,984 UserVoice votes. There doesn't seem to be a way to show combined UserVoice and Developer Community votes, or when migrated UserVoice items were first published.

While those requests listed above are now on the roadmap, the top three vote getters are still under review:

  • Color coded tabs in Visual Studio (970 votes, 191 comments)
    Color coded tabs in Visual Studio
    [Click on image for larger view.] Color coded tabs in Visual Studio (source: Microsoft).
  • Visual Studio for Linux (771 votes, 155 comments)
    Color coded tabs in Visual Studio
    [Click on image for larger view.] Visual Studio for Linux (source: Microsoft).
  • Show the active document in bold in Document Well (393 votes, 22 comments)
    Show the active document in bold in Document Well
    [Click on image for larger view.] Show the active document in bold in Document Well (source: Microsoft).

An IDE running on Linux was also the topic of much discussion among more than 700 comments that were posted in reaction to the VS 2022 sneak peak.

As far as the top-rated color coded tabs item, the last comment was just added one week ago: "Two and a half years after it was raised, this feature is still 'Under Review'. What is taking so long?"

Remarkably, it seems to have been posted by someone from the Microsoft dev team.

About the Author

David Ramel is an editor and writer at Converge 360.

comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Creating Business Applications Using Blazor

    Expert Blazor programmer Michael Washington' will present an upcoming developer education session on building high-performance business applications using Blazor, focusing on core concepts, integration with .NET, and best practices for development.

  • GitHub Celebrates Microsoft's 50th by 'Vibe Coding with Copilot'

    GitHub chose Microsoft's 50th anniversary to highlight a bevy of Copilot enhancements that further the practice of "vibe coding," where AI does all the drudgery according to human supervision.

  • AI Coding Assistants Encroach on Copilot's Special GitHub Relationship

    Microsoft had a great thing going when it had GitHub Copilot all to itself in Visual Studio and Visual Studio Code thanks to its ownership of GitHub, but that's eroding.

  • VS Code v1.99 Is All About Copilot Chat AI, Including Agent Mode

    Agent Mode provides an autonomous editing experience where Copilot plans and executes tasks to fulfill requests. It determines relevant files, applies code changes, suggests terminal commands, and iterates to resolve issues, all while keeping users in control to review and confirm actions.

  • Windows Community Toolkit v8.2 Adds Native AOT Support

    Microsoft shipped Windows Community Toolkit v8.2, an incremental update to the open-source collection of helper functions and other resources designed to simplify the development of Windows applications. The main new feature is support for native ahead-of-time (AOT) compilation.

Subscribe on YouTube