Will Visual Studio 2008 be supported by new .NET 4 from the get go?

I'm particularly interested in the System.Collections.Concurrent namespace and the parallel task library, which I would use immediately.

Is it worth upgrading to Visual Studio 2010 when it comes out?

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That would be quite restraining, don't you think? I'd rather not tie their hands by backward compatibility with older VS. – Kugel Dec 31 '09 at 17:59
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4 Answers

up vote 26 down vote accepted

No. VS2008 will not be able to target .NET 4.0:

Visual Studio 2010 supports .NET 4 and earlier projects. Visual Studio 2008 supports .NET 3.5SP1 projects.

Hope this helps,
Polita Paulus
Developer Division
Microsoft

Reference

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Thanks Michael. I knew in my bones that an upgrade was needed, but wanted to confirm it. – scope_creep Dec 31 '09 at 17:49
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While you can't use .NET 4.0 itself from VS2008, if you're interested in the Parallel Extensions stuff, you could download the Reactive Framework (formerly LINQ to Rx) which I believe contains at least a lot of Parallel Extensions backported to .NET 3.5 SP1.

From the Release Notes, it includes:

System.Threading, backport of Parallel Extensions for .NET 4 to .NET 3.5 SP1

  • Task for executing asynchronous operations.
  • Concurrent Collections such as ConcurrentStack, ConcurentQueue ad ConcurrentDictionary.
  • PLINQ for writing parallel queries.
  • addition Threading operations such as Barrier,SpinLock and SpinWait.
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If you want to know whether upgrading to VS 2010 will be worth it, then download beta 2 now, and try it out. Run it in a virtual machine if you don't trust it on a normal development machine. Run through some of the PDC videos showing the new features. Go through the Training Courses.

And above all, tell Microsoft what you think.

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Hi John, I was wanting confirm it. – scope_creep Dec 31 '09 at 17:46
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Historically - No.

Starting with 2008 the IDE has been able to target lower version frameworks, but I doubt they will ever target a newer version framework.

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