![]() I was at a presentation earlier this year where the presenter was typing code. I do not have a clear-cut answer but I have a theory: So, what about user experience? There has been some talk here, here, and here about what it means, but it all is fairly vague. “Deployment, One-Click” means there is a mechanism to deploy a product through the IDE, but not create setup projects that produce a. All, on that note, means there is IDE support for creating new Add-ins. ![]() “Consume Extensions“ means the you can use an existing Visual Studio Add-in. ![]() That leaves the question between deployment tools, extensibility, and "user experience". Most of the differences are fairly straightforward. * 64-bit CPU support, Server Explorer, SQL Server 2005 integration: Yes * Reporting: SQL Server Reporting Services and Crystal Reports * 64-bit CPU support, Server Explorer, SQL Server 2005 integration: No * Reporting: SQL Server Reporting Services Before you spent too much time with the scorecard, let me summarize the major differences: First of all, here are the differences that Microsoft has made public in their feature chart. With the whoops I mentioned here comes the discussion of exactly what is the difference between the two version of the Visual Studio 2005 (standard and professional).
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