[caption id="attachment_135" align="alignright" width="134"] Maoni Stephens - Main GC Developer[/caption] In this blog entry, we would like to discuss some significant changes that were made in the .NET 4.6.x garbage collector (GC). We encourage you to get the latest version, 4.6.2. Our main GC developer, Maoni Stephens wrote up a description of the enhancements that were delivered with the 4.6.2
In this post I’m going to visualize what exactly happens during Garbage Collection (GC) and how different GC modes can significantly affect application performance. I assume that the reader is familiar with garbage collection basics. If this isn’t the case I encourage you to spend 15 minutes to fill this gap, for instance from the following article – “Fundamentals of Garbage Collection” or from a
Dive deep into building world-class cloud native applications with .NET and Azure using .NET Aspire! What makes managed code, “managed”? Most people would point to the garbage collector. Automatic memory management makes a tremendous difference in programmer productivity. And when garbage collection improves, all .NET applications benefit. Abhishek Mondal, the program manager for GC on the Common
In Visual Studio 2022 17.10 Preview 2, we’ve introduced some UX updates and usability improvements to the Connection Manager. With these updates we provide a more seamless experience when connecting to remote systems and/or debugging failed connections. Please install the latest Preview to try it out. Read on to learn what the Connection ...
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