Edit the installer project Using the Advanced Installer Project viewer, you can edit basic information about your installer like Product Details, Launch Conditions, Install Parameters, and much more. Let's suppose we have an Enterprise edition of Advanced Installer.
By default, the installer project will be created based on a Freeware license. Since we want to use features from the Enterprise edition, like selecting a for the installation dialogs, we will need to upgrade our project type:. Press the Edit in Advanced Installer button to open your installer project in Advanced Installer. From the “Project” menu select “Options.”. Navigate to the and select Enterprise. Press the OK button Now, that we have an Enterprise project we have full access to all the available Advanced Installer Enterprise features. Go to.
From the right view select the desired theme and variation for your installer dialogs. Save the project and exit Advanced Installer Visual Studio will ask you if you want to reload the installer project since it was modified. Press the Yes button. Add another Visual Studio Project to the solution If an Advanced Installer Project is added to a solution, it will automatically import the build output and all useful information related to the projects from the solution. If later, the existing projects are modified, or another project is added to the solution the import operation must be redone. Let's add a new Visual Studio project to the solution:.
From the “New Project” dialog in Visual Studio select 'Visual C#' 'WPF App'. In the “Solution” field select Add to solution option. Press the OK button. The new project will be added to the solution. Rebuild the solution. Automatically import.VDPROJ files (optional) If you have solutions that contain old Visual Studio Deployment projects (.vdproj) you can automatically convert them to an Advanced Installer project and have it included in your solution, replacing the old VDPROJ. Just open the solution in Visual Studio, with our Advanced Installer VS extension installed, and VS will prompt you to accept the conversion from VDPROJ to AIPROJ (Advanced Installer VS project).
VS for Mac Product Manager Rajen Kishna replied: 'Our goal with Visual Studio for Mac is to create a native IDE for Mac users with workloads that make sense on macOS. That means 'desktop app' development will target macOS and Visual Studio (on Windows) can be used to target Windows. This site is for feature suggestions; if you need to file a bug, you can visit our. Visual Studio for Mac enables developers to create applications using.NET.
The new project Advanced Installer project will contain all the resources from the old VDPROJ. If you want to customize it more just use the 'Edit in Advanced Installer' button, available when you open the.aip file in Visual Studio.
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Some backstory for those who are interested: For my internship, I am currently working on a web application. This webapp is being developed in ASP.NET MVC in Visual Studio 2017 for Windows 10. I am about to buy a new MacBook Pro (2017), mainly because my current laptop (which I use to develop on and study with) is about to literally break down (LPT: Never buy Acer laptops). Now the thing is that I need to work on the very same project on the MacBook if I happen to actually buy it and replace my Windows device with it.
If I do so, I will simply clone the git-repository. But I don’t know if it is possible for me to continue to develop an ASP.NET MVC project because all I can see on Microsoft’s articles about Visual Studio 2017 for Mac is ASP.NET Core MVC, and not just ASP.NET MVC. Hence, my question: Is it possible to develop a ASP.NET MVC application in Visual Studio 2017 for Mac?
I do not intend to install Windows 10 just yet (got my own reasons for that. Might decide to do this later on). Can someone please help me out by preferably answering my question?
Every bit is welcome! Will be posting this on aswell and any other programming-related sub. I'm pretty sure you can build asp.net mvc using the mono framework and Xamarin with a big caveat - since your team is probably all on Windows you would have to figure out your own entire build system and hope that it is entirely compatible with theirs in terms of checking in to VCS with a single configuration. I don't believe VS will install the.Net Framework SDKs that you need to compile the project without mono (unless they have added support). I did install mono on one of my Macs at work but I can't remember if it was for an mvc project. My official (lol) recommendation would be to not go that route in an every day capacity, but as an experimental project might be interesting. Even if everything 'works' with the project in terms of compilation, you may find smaller issues if your project uses libraries that are incompatible with mono.
Sidenote, ASUS or Lenovo ftw. After being in a similar situation to you I'd recommend using a windows install either as a Dual-Boot, or something along the lines of or While you might be able to get it all working – unless it's part of the newer Core stuff then it's going to be a headache to even setup, and then you might hit unexpected errors and snags down the road. One other thing to check is what web server your team is using, if it's IIS then you're not going to be able to run that on a mac at all (as far as I'm aware) and it'll have to be on a windows boot-up. Anyone can correct me if I'm wrong here: with Parallels and VMWare you can run the systems in parallel and have them talk to each other.
Meaning you can still use your Mac as you like and have access to the benefits of the Windows system. I'd recommend saving the stress and patience for building the webapp instead.