"Giriş yaparak Mintik'in Hizmet Şartlarını kabul ettiğinizi ve Gizlilik Politikasının geçerli olduğunu onayladığınızı kabul etmiş olursunuz."
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"Giriş yaparak Mintik'in Hizmet Şartlarını kabul ettiğinizi ve Gizlilik Politikasının geçerli olduğunu onayladığınızı kabul etmiş olursunuz."
No way man. I just checked their official lifecycle page a few months ago for work. Visual Studio 2022 has mainstream support until 2027 and extended support until January 2032. That’s a good ten years of support just for this version. If they were planning to retire the whole product, they wouldn’t have a roadmap that goes out that far, and they certainly wouldn’t be working on a new major version like Visual Studio 2026 already. They are just trying to get everyone off the super old stuff like 2013, which is a normal thing.
They retired Visual Studio for Mac, but Visual Studio on Windows is fine. Microsoft is still super invested in it because it’s what enterprise developers who do C# and the heavy lifting for Windows apps use. VS Code is for everyone else and lighter stuff, but for a full solution with tons of projects, the full Visual Studio experience is still king. Don’t sweat it for your assignment; it’s the right tool for anything .NET related.
You’re probably seeing stuff about the older versions losing support, or maybe the Mac version getting the boot. Microsoft is all about long-term servicing for the core Windows IDE. It’s too embedded in the Windows ecosystem and in huge corporate dev shops to ever truly retire the whole thing. It’ll just keep getting updated and getting a new number every few years, which seems to be their plan now with the next one coming down the pipeline.
It’s one of those things where they retire one part and people blow it up into the whole thing being gone. Like when they announced the Visual Studio App Center retirement, which is a specific cloud service, not the main IDE. Visual Studio is a huge revenue driver and the foundation for .NET development. It’s safe. Use VS 2022 and you’ll be good for a long time.
I think people confuse the full IDE with VS Code. VS Code is super popular and cross-platform, but it’s really an advanced code editor. Visual Studio is the big, heavy, integrated development environment with all the deep-dive tools for debugging, profiling, and enterprise-level stuff. Microsoft still heavily supports and develops the full Visual Studio IDE for Windows. It’s the home base for C# and .NET development, period.