I have about 50 projects in Visual Studio 2005 for which I am creating a new development machine, and I would like to slowly move these projects to VS 2008, but also have access to 2010 for selected new projects.
Could this work? Are there any errors for this kind of settings? Any general guidelines for running multiple versions of Visual Studio on the same system would be very helpful. In particular, this is due to the management of the controlled migration of projects to new versions, but the ability to selectively save some of the old versions.
7.1, 8 9 ( VB 6), . Visual Studio "" , .sln, . Microsoft Visual Studio Version Selector, , (.vcproj).
, , , , , VS Opions.
Microsoft this, :
Visual Studio Visual Studio.NET 2002, 2003,... ., Visual Studio, Visual Studio , .
Visual Studio Visual Studio.NET 2002, 2003,... .
, Visual Studio, Visual Studio , .
, 2005 , 2005 . , , . , , 2005, 2008 2010 , .
-, , , 2010 . VS #### /, 2010 .
VC6, VB6, VS 2008 VS2010 RC, Windows Vista. VC6 dsp VS2010 . 2008 # 2008 , . 2008 2010 2008 , . Visual Studio .
, .
: Windows 7 x64 VS2013.
, . , ... ... 2005, 2008, 2010. , .
2010 , 2005 2008 .
, : (
VS2005 VS2008 - . -, -, , .
, , .
I also had the same doubts. I work for my company, which is still working on VS 2008, and I want to personally use VS 2010, not the 2008 risk. I set 2010, and it did a great job in 2008. Just make sure you mark projects that are in 2005 and open them in the same way.
The reason it works is simple: if you open the solution file in Notepad, you will see which version of VS is associated with your project.