You’ve asked us for a way to drag tool windows out of the main window and dock them to floating editor tabs, which is extremely handy for a multi-monitor setup, and we listened! Please note that this feature is still a work in progress. There are too many of them to review in detail in this article, but let’s touch on a few highlights. Rider 2022.3 is a treasure trove of UX/UI improvements and additions. A connection can be established right from Rider’s Welcome screen! Remote development documentation has all the details. This time, we’re introducing support for WSL 2 (Windows Subsystem for Linux 2) through the IDE’s remote development functionality. We’re continuing to expand Rider’s remote development capabilities. It comes with updated project templates, the latest target frameworks, NuGet Central Package Management (more on that down below), support for ASP.NET minimal API route groups, and the newest C#11 features. You can learn all about these performance improvements in this blog post.NET 7 SDK support We’ve also introduced several improvements to Rider’s backend performance. The IDE can now load a solution file and build its project tree instantly, without having to wait for the backend to initialize. We’ve made several changes to increase Rider’s startup speed and reduce the time it takes to open a solution and get to work. It’s the most wonderful time of the year: not only are the holidays upon us, but Rider 2022.3 – the last major version of Rider this year – has just been released.
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