Free 64-bit Visual Studio Code - A very popular free code editor for general purpose. It is light and well-equipped with support for many languages out of the box. Additionally, it. For early adopters, you can get the latest release of VS Code each day with the Insiders Build. Available on Mac, Linux and Windows. Download Visual Studio Code.
- Vs Code Download 64 Bit Windows 7
- Visual Studio Code Setup Download
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- Download Vs Code 64 Bit For Windows
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Comments
commented Nov 23, 2015
Is there a reason why there is no 64bit version of Code for Windows? I get that Electron 64bit was only released after Code was already out but is that the only reason? :)
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assigned joaomorenoNov 23, 2015
added the feature-request label Nov 24, 2015
commented Nov 24, 2015
Really is.. Need to fix!
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Closed
modified the milestone: BacklogDec 10, 2015
removed their assignment Jan 6, 2016
commented Mar 7, 2016
Is this still on deck for 1.0 or later?
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commented Mar 7, 2016
Not forgotten about, just not for 1.0.
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Vs Code Download 64 Bit Windows 7
commented May 30, 2016
Any updates?
References for Electron:
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assigned joaomorenoMay 30, 2016
modified the milestones: June 2016, BacklogMay 31, 2016
commented Jun 24, 2016
VS Code might have the same problem as Atom that all the extensions will have to be recompiled if the user migrates from 32bit to 64bit so that might actually be non-trivial to do.
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commented Jun 25, 2016
Updates?
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commented Jul 4, 2016
No updates here yet. But it will come.
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Closed
commented Aug 4, 2016â¢
edited
Please also consider adding a portable 64bit version (compare #329).
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Closed
Closed
commented Dec 14, 2016
Any update on this?
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commented Jan 11, 2017
@joaomoreno compare atom/atom#13135
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commented Feb 25, 2017
@joaomoreno Any updates on that?
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Closed
Closed
Closed
commented May 15, 2017â¢
edited
Why was the 32 bit version the default in the first place? Why not directly develop for x64?
Seriously: What is Microsoft's problem with x64? Just from the top of my head:
Does your telemetry show that there is actually a sizable user base that works on a 32 bit version of Windows? I can understand that it might not be trivial to port a mammoth like the actual Visual Studio, but here you more or less started from scratch and didn't have to pay any attention to backwards compatibility.
Sorry for the rant, but this is bugging me every time I use/install MS products for devolpemnt .. In general I'm very happy with VS-Code
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commented May 15, 2017
@MikeGitb
I think some C++ extension are blocking them. |
Closed
commented May 25, 2017
@MikeGitb 32-bit office is recommended for macros (VBA) back compat. VS is 32-bit for the longest time because they found ways to make everything out of proc, and 64-bit tends to have a lot of code size bloat when references other objects using 64-bit pointers instead of 32-bit. Modern electroplating download full. That also helps make code run faster even in a 64-bit OS. I'm not sure exactly how much of a perf hit you take, but for perf sensitive apps like VS, that was a top concern years ago.
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commented May 26, 2017
On Fri, 26 May 2017 at 06:58 Thomas J. Crowe ***@***.***> wrote: @MikeGitb <https://github.com/mikegitb> 32-bit office is recommended for macros (VBA) back compat. VS is 32-bit for the longest time because they found ways to make everything out of proc, and 64-bit tends to have a lot of code size bloat when references other objects using 64-bit pointers instead of 32-bit. That also helps make code run faster even in a 64-bit OS. I'm not sure exactly how much of a perf hit you take, but for perf sensitive apps like VS, that was a top concern years ago. â You are receiving this because you commented. Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub <#507 (comment)>, or mute the thread <https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/ACr9NC-KVqqtaOCRw6Vn_V_RmjoO4R-vks5r9hWUgaJpZM4Gnsk-> .
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commented May 26, 2017â¢
edited
![Code Code](/uploads/1/2/5/0/125069870/104735109.jpg)
@wizarrc: I've heard the perf argument a couple of times now and I frankly don't buy it. I have yet to see a single program whose x64 Version is noticeably (not just measurable) slower than the 32 bit version. Also, I'd certainly prefer a slight drop in performance to the occational out-of-memory errors on larger projects.
In the End, I didn't want to argue about the individual reasons for or agains a x64 version, Just that I see a general - and very disapointing - pattern where MS and 64Bit software is concerned. Almost as bad as the general lack of utf-8 support (which is admittedly a result of Microsoft early embracing unicode in the first place).
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commented May 26, 2017
@MikeGitb I agree. Nothing is more annoying than hitting a memory limitation when your dev machine is loaded with RAM. I've seen some blog rants about why to use 32-bit. I was just answering your question from my perspective of what I have seen as the attitude toward 64-bit years back as to what their problem is. I think it was mostly based on sub-optimal design which had a lot of performance bottlenecks beforehand. A way back then to hit their perf metrics was to not upgrade to 64-bit. Remember, a lot of that was legacy code moving forward, and 64-bit requires a lot more localized programming techniques (less 64-bit pointers) to keep bloat down. As for newer code bases, it should be easier to tackle.
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Closed
commented Jun 26, 2017
The infrastructure work for this has been done. 64 bits will come out with June's release for Insiders and with July's release for Stable.
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closed this Jun 26, 2017
modified the milestones: June 2017, BacklogJun 27, 2017
added the on-testplan label Jun 27, 2017
added a commit that referenced this issue Jun 28, 2017
commented Jul 14, 2017
It's not exposed on the webpage but the link is here: https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/?dv=win64, which currently gives
VSCodeSetup-x64-1.14.1.exe .
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commented Jul 14, 2017
Thanks
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commented Jul 14, 2017â¢
edited
@saschanaz That is the installer version, not the portable.
@joaomoreno Is there a 64-bit portable release available?
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commented Jul 14, 2017
Zip version: https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/?dv=win64zip&build=insiders
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commented Jul 14, 2017â¢
edited
Thanks, @pltrant. It also works without the
build=insiders query-string part, although there are still some issues remaining (see #329) with the portable 64bit version.
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commented Jul 19, 2017
Stable 1.14.1 now provides download links for 64-bit installer and zip.
Link: https://code.visualstudio.com/#windows64-download-stable |
commented Aug 16, 2017
@WildByDesign That link ist broken.
Use: https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_15#_windows-64-bit
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commented Aug 16, 2017
Just open the vs code download page, select other version, and select the64bit version. The new version arrived today.Benyamin Limantosent from my ASUS FonePad 8Pada tanggal 16 Agt 2017 14.23, 'kuechlerm' <[email protected]>menulis:
â¦
@WildByDesign <https://github.com/wildbydesign> That link ist broken. Use: https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_15#_windows-64-bit â You are receiving this because you commented. Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub <#507 (comment)>, or mute the thread <https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/ACr9NJ-LGLlZaUZouxjB19J-WTmIvyNmks5sYpkDgaJpZM4Gnsk-> .
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commented Oct 15, 2017
@MikeGitb I saw a same question on Zhihu website. The same guyï¼
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commented Oct 15, 2017
@roachsinai: If you are asking, if I'm the same guy that posted something on Zhihu, then the answer is NO, as I didn't even know the site up until now.
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commented Oct 15, 2017
@MikeGitb OK. I see.
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commented Oct 15, 2017
Did the person ask the exact same question or just about getting a 64bit Version of msvc? Because the latter is actually very common.
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commented Nov 5, 2017â¢
edited
Visual Studio Code Setup Download
Should we replace 32bit to 64bit ? what is benefit and disadvantage ?
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Visual Studio Code is a lightweight, yet powerful source code editor that runs from your desktop.* It comes with built-in support for JavaScript, TypeScript and Node.js and has a varied array of extensions available for other languages, including C++, C#, Python, and PHP.
It is based around Githubâs Electron, which is a cross-platform version of the Atom code-editing component, based on JavaScript and HTML5. This editor is a fully featured integrated development environment (IDE) designed for developers working with Microsoftâs open cloud technologies.
Visual Studio Code uses open source .NET tooling to provide support for ASP.NET C# code, building on Omnisharp .NET developer tools and the Roslyn compiler.
The interface is easy to work with, as it is based on a common explorer style, with a pane on the left, which shows all of the files and folders you have access to, and an editor pane on the right, which shows the content of the files you have opened. In this regard, the editor has been developed well, and is pleasing on the eyes. It also has good functionality, with intellisense and autocomplete working well for JSON, CSS, HTML, {less}, and Node.js.
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Visual Studio Code has been designed to work with existing tools, and Microsoft provides documentation to help developers along, with help for working with ASP.NET 5, Node.js, and Microsoftâs TypeScript, as well as tools that can be used to help build and manage Node.js apps.
Visual Studio Code is really being targeted at JavaScript developers who want a fully-fledged development tool for their server-side scripting and who may want to venture from Node.js to .NET-based frameworks. Overall though, Visual Studio Code, is a lightweight yet solid, cross platform code editor, which can be used by anyone to build apps for the Web or the cloud.
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*Versions for Mac OS X and Linux are also available.