Showing results for May 2012 - .NET Blog

May 31, 2012
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Performance consideration for Async/Await and MarshalByRefObject

Stephen Toub - MSFT
Stephen Toub - MSFT

In the previous "What's New for Parallelism in Visual Studio 2012 RC" blog post, I mentioned briefly that for the .NET 4.5 Release Candidate, StreamReader.ReadLineAsync experienced a significant performance improvement over Beta.  There's an intriguing story behind that, one I thought I'd share here.It has to do with some interesting inte...

.NET Parallel Programming
May 31, 2012
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What’s New for Parallelism in Visual Studio 2012 RC

Stephen Toub - MSFT
Stephen Toub - MSFT

In September, I blogged about what was new for parallelism and asynchrony in the Visual Studio 2012 Developer Preview, and in February I followed that up with a post on what was new in the Beta.  Now that Visual Studio 2012 Release Candidate is out, I want to share a few thoughts on what’s new in the Release Candidate.Most new features f...

.NET Parallel Programming
May 31, 2012
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Introducing the .NET Framework 4.5 RC

Brandon Bray
Brandon Bray

Update (2017): See .NET Framework Releases to learn about newer releases. This release is now unsupported. Today, we are announcing the .NET Framework 4.5 RC. We are also announcing Visual Studio 2012 RC, as you can read on Jason Zander’s and Soma’s blog. Please visit the Visual Studio 2012 RC downloads page to install both products. We have made...

.NET
May 31, 2012
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New Features for Web Development in Visual Studio 2012 RC

Web Development Tools Microsoft
Web Development Tools Microsoft

Visual Studio 2012 RC is now available to download. Please visit Jason Zander's Blog for detailed announcement. We have more web development enhancement and features in RC. We’ll discuss some of them in future blog posts. Here are a few web development enhancements and features in Visual Studio 2012 RC since Beta. Updated Web project templa...

ASP.NET
May 8, 2012
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ConcurrentQueue holding on to a few dequeued elements

Stephen Toub - MSFT
Stephen Toub - MSFT

Since .NET 4’s release, I’ve received several questions about a peculiar behavior of ConcurrentQueue<T> having to do with memory management.With Queue<T>, List<T>, and other such data structures in the .NET Framework, when you remove an element from the collection, the collection internally wipes out its reference to t...

.NET Parallel Programming