I use VS 2026, both for work and personal. Its stable, fast and efficient. Its a big improvement over 2022, at least for my use case Answer from orbit99za on reddit.com
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/visualstudio › vs 2022 or vs 2026...
r/VisualStudio on Reddit: Vs 2022 or vs 2026...
December 15, 2025 -

Hi, im a begginer in c++, currently im learning c++ in UDEMY with vs2022 (my course is in vs2022) but i just realize that vs2026 is available, my question is... should i buy another course to focus in this New versión or should i still learning in that course of vs2022? I just have 2 months learning c++, and i want to be an Unreal Engine video game developer 🥹, thanks you all.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/csharp › have you guys upgraded to vs 2026? what do you think?
r/csharp on Reddit: Have you guys upgraded to VS 2026? What do you think?
November 12, 2025 - Looks much like 2022. Loads quicker. Includes .NET 10 SDK. No issues with existing projects. That's about all I've noticed so far. ... I updated to VS 2026, and it’s working great.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/dotnet › vs 2026 performance
r/dotnet on Reddit: vs 2026 performance
October 10, 2025 -

Downloaded the insiders edition earlier today at work to test it out, we have very large solutions where debugging becomes quite laggy and hogs a large amount of ram on vs2022. Even ctrl t code search is laggy and vsvim is also delayed. Pretty shitty experience but ive been dealing with it anyways.

However when i switched to vs2026 these issues went away and it was almost as smooth as using an actual text editor. Debugging was fast and generally moving around and using different ide features was also quick and clean

I was wondering if anyone had a similar experience or how they are finding it?

I did see the reccomended spec being upped to 64gb but from one of the vs devs in this sub i realised it was for ops to buy better dev laptops (which is pretty neat)

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/dotnet › migrating from rider, vs 2022 or 2026
r/dotnet on Reddit: Migrating from rider, VS 2022 or 2026
September 11, 2025 -

I need advice as I didn't use visual studio for years now, I found 2026 got released before I installed 2022, so should I stick to 2022 release or go for the new 2026 version?
Also a dumb question but can I use vs 2026 with other .net versions earlier than 10? As I read it is installed with .net 10

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/dotnet › question about transitioning from visual studio
r/dotnet on Reddit: Question about transitioning from Visual Studio
September 10, 2025 -

I started using Visual Studio with the 2022 release, and I have a simple question about migrating to the upcoming 2026 version.

My question is: when Visual Studio 2026 is released, will the 2022 version automatically update to it, or are they independent versions, meaning I would need to uninstall 2022 and install 2026? How does this transition work for those who previously used VS2015, VS2019, etc.?

Also, I saw that the recommended RAM for VS2026 is 64 GB. In that case, would the minimum be 24 GB? Or would 62 GB be required for large projects?

Find elsewhere
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/programming › visual studio 2026 is now generally available
r/programming on Reddit: Visual Studio 2026 is now generally available
November 12, 2025 - Except the standalone Pro is still 2022 version. Hopefully it'll get updated soon. ... For developers who want to purchase a stand-alone Professional license, Visual Studio 2026 will be available through the
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/dotnet › visual studio 2026 insiders is here!
r/dotnet on Reddit: Visual Studio 2026 Insiders is here!
September 9, 2025 - Here's the reality; Visual Studio 2026 minimum and recommended requirements are the same as 2022 and 2019, but will perform significantly better on the same hardware. The new version uses less resources, and make better use of the available ...
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/visualstudio › hello, can i install vs2026 alongside vs2022?
r/VisualStudio on Reddit: Hello, can I install VS2026 alongside VS2022?
November 13, 2025 - ... Yes but be forewarned. If you open your 2022 apps in 2026 and upgrade to v145 build tools, you will not be able to open them again in 2022 without converting them back to v143.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/unity3d › visual studio 2022 or 2026 for unity 6000.3? tell me which and why
r/Unity3D on Reddit: Visual Studio 2022 or 2026 for Unity 6000.3? Tell me which and why
January 12, 2026 - ... For me the issue is the opposite way around - vscode actually has a pretty good chance of re-attaching, whereas VS2022 or 2026 fails every time. ... doesn't matter really. use whatever is recommended by unity.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/csharp › how unstable is visual studio community 2026 for you?
r/csharp on Reddit: How unstable is Visual Studio Community 2026 for you?
January 19, 2026 -

I rely on Visual Studio heavily, but VS2026 is extremely buggy, whereas VS2022 was stable for me. All kind of features stop working mid-use, like even search on text. When you experience it, you think you're losing your mind, like, "I swear I typed that right?!". And IDE hangs, of course.

As with much Microsoft software back in the day, my workaround has been: turn off the car, get out of the car, get back in the car, restart the engine.

I'm asking because I know I can't be the only one. And, well, misery loves company.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/dotnet › how much disk space is upgrading visual studio 2022 to visual studio 2026 going to cost me?
r/dotnet on Reddit: How much disk space is upgrading Visual Studio 2022 to Visual Studio 2026 going to cost me?
4 days ago -

Hello everyone!

I'm developing an app in MAUI in Visual Studio 2022 (Community version). I use .NET9 and I'm happy with Visual Studio 2022. Now there's one NuGet package that requires .NET10. Very annoying, because that means I'll have to upgrade to Visual Studio 2026.

It's this stubborn NuGet package that's causing me this trouble, in case anyone is interested:

https://www.nuget.org/packages/Shiny.Maui.TableView

Does anyone know now much disk space this upgrade is going to cost me?

I don't have unlimited hard drive space and buying a larger hard drive is not an option right now, because hard drive prices are going through the roof currently.

I really want to do an upgrade, updating the same components that I had installed before, not installing both versions side by side. Did anyone do the upgrade? How much extra space does Visual Studio 2026 occupy compared to Visual Studio 2022?

I heard Visual Studio 2026 includes AI. I have zero interest in that or a local LLM and I hope that won't eat up my disk space.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/visualstudio › a new visual studio 2019, 2022, 2026 extension you may like (or not)
r/VisualStudio on Reddit: A new Visual Studio 2019, 2022, 2026 Extension you may like (or not)
February 7, 2026 -

Hello,

I created a new (free) Visual Studio 2019,2022 and 2026 extension which some of you may (or may not like.)

Unsure if I'm posting in the right place, so if not, my apologies - feel free to move or delete. It's the first VS extension I've created. (Hopefully more to come)

Here's the blurb.

The Problem

During a typical development session:

  • Solution Explorer disappears offscreen or gets buried under other windows

  • Tool windows (such as Solution Explorer, Github CoPilot, Test Explorer, Output window) accumulate until your workspace becomes cluttered

  • You repeatedly open the same combinations of tool windows for specific tasks (debugging, profiling, database work, etc.)

The Solution

This extension provides flexible, stack-based tool window management:

Quick Access Commands

  • Show Solution Explorer - Instantly bring Solution Explorer fully into view, even if it's offscreen

  • Close All Tool Windows (except Solution Explorer) - Clean your workspace while preserving navigation

  • Close All Tool Windows - Nuclear option for complete decluttering (code windows remain untouched)

Stash/Restore System (The Power Feature)

With this feature you can stash tool windows for showing or closing later.

FeatureVisual Studio Built-inThis Extension
Merge tool windowsNo - replaces everythingYes - add to current workspace
Quick save without namingNo - must create named layoutYes - instant stash to stack
Multiple saved configurationsYesYes
Context menu operationsNoYes - apply, hide, drop
Persistent across sessionsYesYes
Affects code editor layoutYes - overwrites everythingNo - tool windows only
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/cpp › vs 2026 18.0 / msvc build tools 14.50 released for production use
r/cpp on Reddit: VS 2026 18.0 / MSVC Build Tools 14.50 released for production use
November 11, 2025 -

See the VS 2026 release notes for everything that's changed in the product, the MSVC compiler team's blog post about C++23 Core Language features (yes, they're finally working on C++23!), and as always, the STL Changelog's detailed summary of everything we merged for this release. I take great care to record every single commit that goes into the STL, excluding only README updates and utterly trivial or internal-only changes.

If you have questions or concerns about the product, I can typically get MSVC team members to respond directly here (and I can answer STL questions myself).

Edit: Shortly after I posted this, we also published What's New for C++ Developers in Visual Studio 2026 version 18.0 which covers C++-specific IDE features (and some overlapping mentions of compiler and library changes).

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/visualstudio › visual studio 2026
r/VisualStudio on Reddit: Visual studio 2026
November 13, 2025 -

Sharing my experience with Visual Studio 2026 after one hour of usage:

I didn’t really feel like I was using a mature IDE — it feels more like something designed for kids to play with.

The overall design is uncomfortable compared to Visual Studio 2022.

And oh, the blue color! They removed my favorite theme and replaced it with nonsensical colors that strain your eyes after just a short time. Even the dark mode doesn’t make sense. I really don’t understand what happened with the theming — and it seems I’m not alone, as many people are complaining about the new look and color scheme.

Based on these concerns, I’d rather stick with Visual Studio 2022 than use what feels like a toy.