![]() ![]() The first set of options are in the Environment section. But in terms of customizing your driver coding environment, there are two or three primary option sections that you will definitely want to play with. The exact number of options depends on what you’ve installed with VS. Just opening the dialog box from “Tools -> Options… “, presents you with around two dozen primary sets of options that you can play with. In case you haven’t noticed, there are at least 32 million different things you can set, change, or tune within Visual Studio. ![]() I’ll even give you a few ideas on where you can start. Take a Friday afternoon and spend time on Visual Studio customization settings. And, yes, I hesitate to say it, but you will be more productive. You’ll find the VS editor less annoying every time you use it. The thing is, with Visual Studio, time spent getting your environment customized to your needs and preferences will be time well spent. You don’t want to spend time fooling with your environment. You just want to open a project and get busy writing your code. ![]() If you’re like me, you’ve got work to do. Interestingly, these two things work together. Selecting the right set of Visual Studio Extensions.Taking the time to customize the environment.I found that there are two primary keys to becoming happy with VS. Over the years, Visual Studio and I have come to an understanding. ![]() Whenever I tried to use VS for driver development in the past, I was always frustrated with strange behavior (“Why does it insist on indenting my case statements incorrectly!”), lame and close to useless syntax highlighting, and pointless information panes. But now I’ve fully bought-in to using Visual Studio (VS) as an editor for driver development. ![]()
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