![]() Things changed when Visual Studio 2017 released. ![]() Besides, PVS-Studio had only one analyzer back then - for C/C++. Every now and then we would have to add support for new features of C++, which the Visual C++ compiler was gradually learning to work with, but it generally wasn't a difficult task either and could be easily done right before a new Visual Studio release. ![]() Since the first version of PVS-Studio that shipped with a plugin for Visual Studio (it was Visual Studio 2005 back then), supporting new versions of this IDE has been quite a trivial task for us, which basically came down to updating the plugin's project file and dependencies of Visual Studio's various API extensions. Before we start, I'd like to take a look back at the history of supporting the previous versions of Visual Studio in PVS-Studio so you better understand our vision of the task and solutions that we came up with in every single situation.
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