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What's missing in Visual Studio Community 2015? They say it's full-featured and free, but if that's the case, then why do/will they still sell Visual Studio Ultimate 2015 or Visual Studio Enterprise 2015 for 6 grand?

Something is missing in the Community preview, right? And why is it called 'Community'? My code won't be synced across your devices like the new Windows 10 update system is, will it? (Kind of joking about that last part, and kind of not, too).

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4 Answers 4

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There are 2 major differences.

  1. Technical
  2. Licensing

Technical, there are 3 major differences:

First and foremost, Community doesn't have TFS support.
You'll just have to use git (arguable whether this constitutes a disadvantage or whether this actually is a good thing).
Note: This is what MS wrote. Actually, you can check-in&out with TFS as normal, if you have a TFS server in the network. You just cannot use Visual Studio as TFS SERVER.

Second, VS Community is severely limited in its testing capability.
Only unit tests. No Performance tests, no load tests, no performance profiling.

Third, VS Community's ability to create Virtual Environments has been severely cut.

On the other hand, syntax highlighting, IntelliSense, Step-Through debugging, GoTo-Definition, Git-Integration and Build/Publish are really all the features I need, and I guess that applies to a lot of developers.

For all other things, there are tools that do the same job faster, better and cheaper.

If you, like me, anyway use git, do unit testing with NUnit, and use Java-Tools to do Load-Testing on Linux plus TeamCity for CI, VS Community is more than sufficient, technically speaking.

Licensing:

A) If you're an individual developer (no enterprise, no organization), no difference (AFAIK), you can use CommunityEdition like you'd use the paid edition (as long as you don't do subcontracting)
B) You can use CommunityEdition freely for OpenSource (OSI) projects
C) If you're an educational insitution, you can use CommunityEdition freely (for education/classroom use)
D) If you're an enterprise with 250 PCs or users or more than one million US dollars in revenue (including subsidiaries), you are NOT ALLOWED to use CommunityEdition.
E) If you're not an enterprise as defined above, and don't do OSI or education, but are an "enterprise"/organization, with 5 or less concurrent (VS) developers, you can use VS Community freely (but only if you're the owner of the software and sell it, not if you're a subcontractor creating software for a larger enterprise, software which in the end the enterprise will own), otherwise you need a paid edition.

The above does not consitute legal advise.
See also:
https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/262916/understanding-visual-studio-community-edition-license

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  • so it has these right? "On the other hand, syntax highlighting, IntelliSense, Step-Through debugging, GoTo-Definition, Git-Integration and Build/Publish are really all the features I need, and I guess that applies to a lot of developers." Jul 20, 2016 at 10:39
  • @MonsterMMORPG: Yep, it has all these. Jul 21, 2016 at 4:51
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    @StefanSteiger just to be sure, so if I'm a solo developer and sell some software developer with Visual Studio Community and in turn gain over 1 million in revenue (or any amount), I still don't need a paid license?
    – vallentin
    Sep 6, 2016 at 17:10
  • @Vallentin: My interpretation of the license is, that "the second" you cross the 1 million line, you need to stop developing in VS, or aquire a license. However, I don't think those 10k should be a problem if you really make 10E6 in revenue. Otherwise you can use SharpDevelop, Eclipse or MonoDevelop. If you really want to be sure, ask Microsoft by email, and store the response on paper. Even safer, ask by registered mail. Sep 8, 2016 at 16:21
  • @StefanSteiger of course, in the grand scheme of things, 10K is nothing compared to 1M. Also is the license only needed for use of VS, what about just using their MSVC compiler? As if it's only VS you need a license for, then in a sense, never mentioning publicly that you use VS, they'd never really know (purely hypothetical speaking, as a question).
    – vallentin
    Sep 8, 2016 at 22:43
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Check the following: https://www.visualstudio.com/vs/compare/ Visual studio community is free version for students and other academics, individual developers, open-source projects, and small non-enterprise teams (see "Usage" section at bottom of linked page). While VSUltimate is for companies. You also get more things with paid versions!

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    Yeah. I assumed so. But then technically it isn't full featured. I'd be more inclined to say it's probably ~85% featured. I did see that page, however I fail to see where they compare Community to the others, unless it's called something else on that page.
    – NDEIGU
    May 17, 2015 at 9:10
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    @SE505: Q: How does Visual Studio Community 2013 compare to other Visual Studio editions? A: Visual Studio Community 2013 includes all the great functionality of Visual Studio Professional 2013, designed and optimized for individual developers, students, open source contributors, and small teams. (see: visualstudio.com/products/visual-studio-community-vs)
    – marc_s
    May 17, 2015 at 9:14
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    For anyone else who's curious as to the specific differences between Community and Professional, there are two big ones: Community has (1) no Team Foundation Server features, and (2) does not support CodeLens. Jan 9, 2016 at 18:37
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    For VS 2015, Community and Professional are functionally virtually identical. The major areas of difference are: 1) No free training materials (access to PluralSight, Azure etc) with Community, and 2) No support for Microsoft's Team Foundation server (collaborative/team development tools). It provides everything needed for professional development as an individual and for many small teams.
    – Peter
    Jul 21, 2016 at 12:37
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    @theftprevention, are there any free alternatives for CodeLens ? Feb 3, 2017 at 11:31
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Visual Studio Community is same (almost) as professional edition. What differs is that VS community do not have TFS features, and the licensing is different. As stated by @Stefan.

The different versions on VS are compared here - https://www.visualstudio.com/en-us/products/compare-visual-studio-2015-products-vs

enter image description here

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  • Lab Management is the ability to (automatically) setup Virtual Environments that I mentioned. Sep 8, 2016 at 16:19
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    I used TFS (Team Foundation Server) with VS community edition 2015. Thus it is possible. But here I see that, there is no available feature for the TFS in VS Studio Community. It's a bit confusing to me. Will you please clarify me about this? Aug 9, 2017 at 6:41
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    @Rashedul.Rubel - You can use it as TFS client, and you can connect to TFS server, take latest, checkin, checkout etc. But you cannot use it as TFS server. TFS server is a much comprehensive tool. You can read more about it here - visualstudio.com/tfs
    – Yogi
    Aug 9, 2017 at 8:30
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    @Rashedul.Rubel: This is correct. You can indeed use it as TFS client. Updated my answer accordingly. Nov 11, 2017 at 10:14
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    I can't find any picture like this one for Visual Studio for Mac. Jul 3, 2018 at 19:29
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All these answers are partially wrong.

Microsoft has clarified that Community is for ANY USE as long as your revenue is under $1 Million US dollars. That is literally the only difference between Pro and Community. Corporate or free or not, irrelevant.

Even the lack of TFS support is not true. I can verify it is present and works perfectly.

EDIT: Here is an MSDN post regarding the $1M limit: MSDN (hint: it's in the VS 2017 license)

EDIT: Even over the revenue limit, open source is still free.

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  • @Chris Bordeman, can you please provide a link where MS says this? I know that is true because on VS for Mac I can do the same regardless the edition, but because you said that MS clarified this, I need a link to prove my boss and save money Jul 5, 2018 at 14:32
  • There's no support for things thing XLST transformation debugging in community whereas there is in professional....
    – Gareth
    Nov 5, 2018 at 21:30
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    Also, If your organization has more than 250 PC's, It is considered as an enterprise irrespective of the revenue.
    – Chirag K
    Apr 5, 2019 at 7:27
  • I think this answer is a bit outdated now (or was lacking a bit of info the whole time), as the VS 2022 license explicitly states that you must also only have 5 or fewer people using VS to develop for your organization if you're not an enterprise.
    – Ben
    Aug 23, 2022 at 5:05

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