Hi everyone! Today we’re featuring a guest author from another team in Microsoft on our Semantic Kernel blog. Today's topic will cover how to utilize API's manifests. An API manifest is a way to store the dependencies that an application has on HTTP APIs. It contains characteristics of those dependencies including links to API ...
The biggest .NET virtual event is back, join-in now for the launch of .NET 8! Today our team is thrilled to introduce you to the latest major stable release of .NET MAUI in .NET 8! We build .NET MAUI to enable .NET developers to create cross-platform applications for Android, iOS, macOS, and Windows with deep native integrations, platform-native user interfaces, and hybrid experiences that extend
The C++ standard library comes with a few smart pointer types. The simplest one is unique_ptr: This class babysits a raw pointer and remembers to delete it at destruction (in an appropriate manner). Dumping the contents of a unique_ptr is just looking at the raw pointer inside. The complication is that there is also a deleter object in the unique_ptr. This deleter object is usually an empty class,
Over the past few months, during the lead-up to the TypeScript 5.0 beta, our team spent a good portion of our time looking for ways to improve the performance of our compiler so that your projects build faster. One of the ways we improved was by looking into an oft overlooked aspect of many JavaScript VMs: inline caching. A Brief Primer on Inline Caching Inline caching is an optimization often use
Building new functionality, writing unit tests, and learning new technologies has never been easier or more fun. The Microsoft Fluent design language provides a unified framework to create and deliver more productive, consistent, and accessible applications. The Fluent design principles have been applied across familiar products like Microsoft 365 and we’ve been using those principles in the IDE t
Artificial intelligence (AI) and Large Language Models (LLM) are helping to transform the way we develop and interact with software. From chatbots to code generators, natural language is the future of user interaction, delivering delightful and intelligent “copilot” experiences. As these AI models become more prevalent and accessible, organizations and developers are looking for ways to quickly an
Today we’re excited to announce our beta release of TypeScript 5.0! This release brings many new features, while aiming to make TypeScript, smaller, simpler, and faster. We’ve implemented the new decorators standard, functionality to better support ESM projects in Node and bundlers, new ways for library authors to control generic inference, expanded our JSDoc functionality, simplified configuratio
Central Package Management Dependency management is a core feature of NuGet. Managing dependencies for a single project can be easy. Managing dependencies for multi-project solutions can prove to be difficult as they start to scale in size and complexity. In situations where you manage common dependencies for many different projects, you can leverage NuGet’s central package management features to
Today we are excited to announce the beta release of TypeScript 4.4! To get started using the beta, you can get it through NuGet, or use npm with the following command: You can also get editor support by Downloading for Visual Studio 2019/2017 Following directions for Visual Studio Code and Sublime Text 3. Some major highlights of TypeScript 4.4 are: Control Flow Analysis of Aliased Conditions Sym
The Initial Preview of GUI app support is now available for the Windows Subsystem for Linux A year ago at BUILD 2020 we introduced our goal to bring Linux GUI applications to the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) to run Linux GUI applications. We are proud to announce the first preview of this highly anticipated and open source feature! We’ve given this feature the nickname: “WSLg”. Please check o
Support for Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) 2 distros is being backported to Windows 10 version 1903, and 1909! Yes, you read that right. We heard how much you liked WSL 2 and wanted to expand its accessibility, and over the last few months we worked on bringing it back to 1903 and 1909. About Us We are Ty (Tito) Citrin, a PM, and Mitchell Minkoff, an engineer, both working in Windows Servicing.
Introducing YARP Preview 1 YARP is a project to create a reverse proxy server. It started when we noticed a pattern of questions from internal teams at Microsoft who were either building a reverse proxy for their service or had been asking about APIs and technology for building one, so we decided to get them all together to work on a common solution, which has become YARP. YARP is a reverse proxy
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
処理を実行中です
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く