►
Description
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A
C
B
C
A
A
Teams
back
up,
okay,
I'm,
just
gonna,
assume
yeah.
Everyone
can
see
it's
loading
on
stream.
Ok,
so
if
you
want
to
check
out
the
links
that
I'm
sharing
today,
you
can
go
to
dotnet
community
stand
up
to
lean
7
1
2020,
since
that's
long
I'll
try
to
put
the
link
in
the
chats,
so
first
I'm
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
what
we've
released
in
16.7
preview
3.
So
recent
release
just
went
out.
A
Let's
see
we
had
a
few
new,
tooling
things
and
productivity
and
I'm
just
making
sure
I'm
on
the
right
page,
yep,
ok,
so
the
first
one
is
removing
a
suppression
operator
when
it's
not
doing
the
right
thing.
So
I'll
go
ahead
and
open
up
this
app
I
have
an
app
that
every
single
method
is
one
of
the
new
code
fixes
and
refactorings
and
I
sort
it
by
what
release
for
in.
So
this
is
16.7
a
link
to
this
repo
is
in
the
URL
list
that
I
just
put
in
check
so
right
now.
A
Let's
say
you
have
this
exclamation
point
in
front
of
is
this
is
not
doing
what
you
think.
It's
doing
you'll
actually
notice
that
the
compiler
is
asking
you
to
fix
this
format,
to
actually
add
it
as
a
null
check
for
a
so
to
check
the
left
side
of
the
expression.
So
it's
not
negating
is
which
is
trying
to
do
pattern
matching
trying
to
match
if
the
a
type
is
compatible
with
whatever
is
on
the
right
of
the
expression.
B
A
A
Lots
of
interesting
stuff
on
c-sharp
Lane,
to
debate
exactly
those
kinds
of
things
and
the
second
code
fix
and
refactoring
that
we've
added
is
generating
a
constructor
but
with
properties.
So
let's
say
I'm
initializing
a
brand
new
type
but
I'm
using
a
parameter
that
it
hasn't
seen.
Yet
it
will
offer
to
build
that
constructor.
But
now
it'll
actually
include
include
the
property
that
I'm
using
in
the
call
so
it'll
initialize
the
into
V
and
actually
add
that
to
the
type
just
pretty
cool
I
should.
A
A
There's
some
people
are
like:
oh
great,
okay,
so
that's
our
demo
house
chat
going
people
just
saying:
hi,
Joan.
A
Afternoon,
hello,
awesome!
So
if
you
have
any
questions
or
it
over,
we
can
be
we're
completely
at
your
mercy.
So
that's
what's
new
one
interesting
blog
post
that
I
wanted
to
call
out
I
think
this
was
called
out
in
the
asp.net
like
string.
Really
briefly
was
Sarah
has
been
awesome
post
on
the
dotnet
vlog,
introducing
the
dotnet
Monitor
experimental
tool.
It's
a
global
tool.
It'll
help
get
diagnostic
feedback
on
any
dotnet
process
was
just
pretty
sweet,
so
this
is
exactly
how
to
set
it
up.
B
A
There's
sometimes
it's
one
of
those
gifts
that
keeps
on
giving
and
I
get
I
am
nerding
out
about
that
kind
of
stuff.
Something
we
are
running
into.
Wait
should
I
go
into
this
side,
chat
yeah.
Of
course
it's
illiterate,
so
we're
right
now
we're
looking
at
you
know
the
group
by
in
the
test,
Explorer
you
can
group
by
like
project
namespace
in
class
and
I,
guess
individual
studio,
sorry
and
project
namespace
class.
You
can
rearrange
it.
A
Private
preview,
right
now,
we've
talked
about
it
a
little
bit.
There
was
like
a
talk
on
it
at
build
and
stuff
anyway,
in
the
test
Explorer
at
least
you'll
need
a
way
to
show
tests
that
run
on
different
environments
as
well,
so
it
like
adds
a
dimension
to
the
matrix,
but
we
can
handle
that
because
we
already
have
a
group
by
that's
you
couldn't
you
can
completely
customize
the
one
of
your
group.
A
Bys
can
be
I,
think
I
froze
teams
with
my
flailing,
so
you
can
group
by
different
environments
and
that'll,
just
be
a
neat
really
easy
way
to
show
results.
So
if
you
wanted
to
have
your
results
like
group,
your
test
by
class
and
then
group
them
by,
like
whatever
ran
in
Linux
in
a
Linux
container,
that
your
environments
connected
to
and
whatever
read
locally,
you
can
organize
by
that.
If
you
wanted
your
environments
to
be
like
at
the
parent
node,
you
could
do
that.
It'd
be
really
cool.
I.
C
A
Yeah,
if
anyone
ever
gets
into
visual
studio
and
they're
like
wow,
this
is
like
a
this
is
built
for
this
is
really
like
over
built,
or
this
is
a
lot
of
like
features
you
can
use
to
navigate
code
or
anything
like
that.
It's
because
some
people
are,
after
these
huge
solutions
and
that's
what
they
have
to
what
they
got
to
use
cool.
A
A
B
Spoke
about
productivity
improvements
in
both
vs
for
Mackin
vs
windows
with
mica.
It
was
a
good
there's.
A
good
experience.
I
think
that
we
all
you
know,
had
to
learn
how
how
to
read.
You
know
we
learn
how
to
do
bill
in
in
the
remote
context
and
I
think
there
was
some
there
I
think
was
a
good
experience,
everybody
to
have
kind
of
in
any
reimagining
how
these
no
big
events
can
can
be
done
from
thousands
from
places
across
the
world
and
I
think
it
was
fun.
B
B
C
A
A
Where
did
you
get
the
most
interaction
there?
I
got
to
interact
with
people
a
lot
on
Twitter,
but
I,
still
kind
of
missed
the
chat
box
and
forth
with,
like
the
back-and-forth
of
like
a
a
booth
duty,
yeah.
C
Yeah
there's
an
ask
the
expert
sort
of
a
session
we
did
and
and
another
focus
group
I
think
it
was
so
those
were
a
little
bit
closer
to
sort
of
like
the
booth.
But
you
know
booth
duty
where
we
were
on
the
floor,
build
in
the
past
traditionally.
B
C
A
I,
don't
like
my
I,
signed
up
for
one
of
I,
think
it
was
a
Q&A
with
the
team.
I
forget
what
they
called
all
the
different
categories
of
things,
but
it
was
a
teens
live
event
and
I
loved
that
we
got
300
questions
and
chat.
Oh
wait,
you
can
watch
this
Q&A,
it's
in
the
one
of
the
links
in
the
URL
list
too.
If
you
want
to
go
back
and
see
that
but
I
loved
getting
like
300
questions
in
chat,
that
was
cool
and
they
were
all
written
down
and
people
could
vote
on
them.
A
So
we
knew
exactly
what
was
like
most
impactful
when
I
think
got
like
60
votes,
and
it
was
about
like
vs
koteas
roadmap,
which
one
do
I
use,
which
was
really,
which
was
really
interesting
to
know
like
what
is
absolutely
at
the
top
of
people's
minds.
What
I
didn't
like
was
a
lot
of
times.
We
would
finally
get
to
a
question
and
we'd
have
like
follow-up
like
Oh.
What
do
you
mean
in
what
context?
And
there
wasn't
that
back
and
forth
so
yeah.
B
A
B
The
the
lack
of
follow-up
questions
was
definitely
something
that
I
think
you
know
it's
hard
to
mimic
in
a
in
a
remote
environment
like
that,
where
you
lose
the
context
of
a
conversation
whenever
the
next
question
comes,
and
that
was
something
that
you
know
where
I
think
we
all
had
to
learn
to
work
around,
and
hopefully
hopefully
we
can
move
back
in
person
here
soon
and
I
think
that
there
I
think
that
it's
good
to
have
both
types
of
options
for
50
people.
I.
B
A
A
C
Our
team
did
one
thing
that
was
a
fun
experiment
with
I,
remember
his
web
PR,
but
we
did
our
own
like
right
when
everybody
started
to
go
into
the
you
know,
stay
at
home
back
in
March,
or
so
our
own
teams
were
scheduled
to
all
be
on
site
in
Redmond
to
actually
interact
with
each
other,
and
so
we
had
quickly
pivot.
On
that
and
one
thing
that
was
really
neat
from
our
UX
team
to
play
around
with
my
friends
and
co-workers.
C
Could
have
been
chatting
to
each
other,
but
it
was
still
neat
from
a
web
browser
to
chat
with
you
know
to
kind
of
simulate
that
environment.
But
the
really
neat
part
was
the
presenter
with
the
the
VR
headset.
When
we
watched
him
their
little
emoji
character
actually
had
the
mannerisms
of
the
speaker.
You
could
tell
it
was
Travis
presenting
because.
C
B
C
B
A
B
B
C
D
C
I
know
even
know:
I
spoke
with
this
process
that
question
we
actually
to
speak
the
other
week,
which
was
always
fun
in
person.
Heco
lens,
it's
one,
I,
don't
know
about
folks,
following
along
with
vision,
studio
for
mac,
it's
been
on
our
list
of
feature
requests
on
the
developer
community
site
for
a
while.
So
it's
up
near
the
top
right
now,
and
so
it's
what
we're.
C
Looking
into
my
don't
have
an
immediate
thing
around
that,
like
it's
coming
out
in
the
next
release,
it'll
be
a
little
bit,
there's
some
tricky
stuff
behind
the
scenes
we
need
to
work
out,
but
the
shared
editor
we're
on
now.
It's
got
to
help
out
a
good
bit
there
and
there's
other
stuff
in
flight,
we're
doing
with
Rozlyn
integration.
That
will
start
to
make
it
easier.
So
I
am
very
hopeful
within
well
I'm
gonna
go
the
calendar
here,
cuz,
it's
a
lot
safer
to
say
so
within
a
year
really
hopeful
to
have
something
there.
C
Our
first
step
at
this
point.
Unless
I
get
a
lot
of
strong
feedback,
the
other
way
would
actually
be
starting
with
the
references
functionality.
So
we
get
that
base
base.
Support
of
coal
and
then
start
layering
in
some
stuff.
I
know:
I
love
the
unit
test
integration
on
Visual
Studio,
so
that
would
be
so
nice
to
have
included
in
a
Visual
Studio
for
Mac
too,
but
he
asked
the
latest
there.
A
B
Where
we
were
trying
to,
you
know,
determine
what
the
most
useful
features
are
and
I
think
we
had
a
pretty
good,
pretty
good
signal
that
the
the
reference
counting
was
kind
of
the
you
know.
That
was
the
feature
that
most
defined
clusters.
Colin's
is
such
a
it's
a
wide
range
of
features,
it's
kind
of
like
an
umbrella
feature.
You
know
where
there's
a
ton
of
different
things
that
account
for
it.
So
yeah
I
think
it's
interesting
to
see
kind
of
what
you
know
when
when
can
we
call
something
Colin's
like
what
is
it?
B
D
D
A
Interesting
I
had
asked
him
to
file
a
feedback
ticket.
A
A
B
A
D
A
I
mean
I,
don't
know,
actually,
if
your
internal
or
not,
and
how
licensing
would
work
out
because
it
is
closed
source
and
everything,
but
we
should
definitely
talk.
We
don't
have
a
bunch
of
people
currently
on
the
team
who
worked
on
until
the
test
back
in
the
day.
So
if
you
have
a
bunch
of
background
which
it
sounds
like
you
do
yeah
we
should
chat.
Try
to
get
that
prioritize,
maybe
I'd,
be
great.
I
mean
I'm,
pretty
sure
you
just
offer
it
support
it.
So
we're
gonna
go.
D
D
A
A
So
studying
active
hours
will
avoid
windows
updating
during
times
that
you
have
told
it
that
you
will
be
working
on
so
play
it'll
be
better
I
want
us
to
yell
at
me
when
I
should
be
creating
a
new
branch.
I
know
right.
How
would
be
so
helpful?
Do
you
think
they're
planning
that
with
the
new
get
window
you.
B
A
There
actually
was
updates
in
get
productivity
in
our
release,
notes,
create
a
new
get
repository,
starting
from
any
folder
or
a
brand
new
folder
view
and
manage
get
branches
in
a
tree
view
with
nougat
repository
view,
switch
between
it
for
each
branch.
I,
don't
think
we
have
anything
on
that
yet,
but
we
can
forward
that
feedback
along.
A
B
B
D
B
A
B
A
Yeah
yeah
James
launcher
magno
and
Claire.
We
used
to
have
a
like
mobile
livestream.
Oh
it's
tomorrow.
Thank
you.
John
asked
tomorrow
on
the
live
stream.
They'll
have
more
people
who
are
more
familiar
as
a
brand
I
would
imagine
I,
don't
even
know
what
to
imagine
I
don't
know
if
it'll
all
automatically
be
cuz
C
sharp
mine
you
can
already
use
with.
You,
can
already
control
your
language
version
separate
from
the
dotnet
version,
but
there
is
a
limit
to
how
far
you
can
go
depending
on
what
framework
you're
targeting
I,
don't
know,
sorry
seems.
B
A
A
Not
familiar
with
any
work
we
might
be
doing
her
on
that.
One
thing
I
did
want
to
call
out
was,
if
you
are
catching
up
on,
build
I
want
to
make
sure
you
didn't
miss
the
journey
to
one
met
with
Scott
hunter
and
Scott
Hanselman.
That
covered
a
lot
of
the
new
like
what's
coming
in
dotnet
five.
What
is
it
going
to
be
at
about?
It
covered
the
Maui
transition,
which
is
the
multi
application,
UI
framework
that
we'll
be
working
on
for
dotnet
five,
which
will
support
at
which
will
be
like
cross-platform
and
everything.
A
A
B
B
B
A
B
My
always
supported
where
my
icon,
that
my
only
support
Apple
silicone,
which
I
have
a
few
things
to
say
about
that.
First
of
all,
this
I've
heard
the
word
Apple
silicone.
So
much
recently
in
the
context
of
light
I've
never
heard
people
said
I
can
tell
silicone,
am
decent
I
thought?
No!
No!
Why?
How
about
marketing
this
like
butts
actively
yeah
I,
mean
I.
Think
that
we're
going
to
be
doing
some
testing
around
I
still
have
the
pre-release
Mac
Mini
zips
thing
it
out
to
ensure
that
that
everything
works
I.
B
You
know,
if
you
think
about
arm
as
a
platform,
that's
a
majority
of
what
you
are
and
applications
run
on
in
the
xamarin
world,
so
on
an
iOS
app
or
an
Android.
App
is
running
on
arm
and
the
Android
emulators
and
arm
me
later.
So
I
think
that
the
the
in
the
context
of
xamarin
the
arm
transition
actually
might
be
a
pretty
straightforward
transition
for
that
team.
I
think
that
no
there's
gonna
have
to
be
some
workaround
either
working
with
be
us
from
Mac
against
either
the
emulator
or
directly
on
arm.
B
A
C
A
B
A
B
A
B
C
Actually
happen
on
the
hon
I
think
I've
been
on
the
same
ins.
No
I'm,
not
I,
think
I've
been
on
the
same.
Install
since
I
got
this
computer
like
three
years
ago.
So
I
enjoy
tools
like
the
dotnet
core
uninstall
tool
that
came
out
a
while
ago
to
help
clean
up
the
SDKs
and
bits
that
are
in
stored
all
in
store
installed
on
my
computer
and
such
and
using
some
of
those
but
yeah
I'm
the
opposite
end.
So
bad
about
how
old
some
stuff
is
on
my
machine
yeah.
B
A
B
B
Mac,
you
can
just
like
rename
the
dot
app
package
and
it
can
therefore
names
it,
and
you
can
also
do
an
opportunity.
The
if
you
right-click
on
half
and
say,
show
package
contents.
You
can
go
into
like
the
info
dot,
P
list
and
change
some
of
the
some
of
the
default
setting.
So
you
can
make
it
any
name
for
it,
but
yeah
not
the
same
as
I.
Think
they're
talking
about
Windows
editor.
D
A
B
B
A
Think
blazer
is
already
wildly
popular
I
have
nowhere
numbers
you're,
not
but
I,
like
just
with
an
interest
alone
on
like
views
on
our
blogs
or
videos
and
stuff
blaze.
There
is
always
one
of
the
top
attended
sessions
and
everything
so
I'm,
not
I.
I
am
actually
a
little
bit
always
jealous
of
dandruff
talks
cuz.
They
always
get
way
more
views,
but
I
like
with
the
visuals,
do
the
elantra,
whatever
not
that
I
look,
but
it's
a
bit
of
a
vanity
metric
that
I
might
have
the
problem
with
don't
worry
about
it.
A
C
B
B
Yeah,
that's
what
this
one
thing:
I
got
from
from
being
on
on
dice
today,
he's
like
yeah
that
guy
yeah,
the
you
know
the
guy
sipping,
the
soda
pop
in
this
for
Aleksey,
that's
the
one
I
know
got.
D
A
See
there's
a
comment
about
mr.
studio,
getting
slower
and
slower
the
years.
Then.
Why
is
that?
And
because
the
hardware
is
obviously
sleepy
enough,
I'd
actually
say
that
we
do
much
more
complex
analysis
of
tools,
so
you
have
search
functions
and
like
final
references
and
testify,
bring
all
this
stuff
happening
in
the
background.
So
you
have
a
lot
more
context
and
a
really
smart
analysis
of
what
code
is
there
where,
as
years
ago
it
it
wasn't
a
plain
text?
Editor,
but
it
wasn't.
You
know
it's
been
developing
a
lot
over
the
years.
B
You
know,
but
in
all
honesty,
I
think
it
has
gone
quite
a
bit
faster,
I.
Think
there,
like
I,
think
it's
one
of
those
things
that,
like
you,
don't
always
notice
the
improvements
right
away.
But
if
you
go
back,
install
vs,
2015
or
something
and
then
try
to
do
some
of
the
same
cause
same
things
in
the
same,
you
know
breadth
of
things
you
can
do
in
vs
2019,
it's
it's
pretty.
It's
pretty
well.
A
Also,
just
like
catch
more
errors
now
way
before
run
time,
so
you
don't
actually
have
to
run
it.
You
just
get
the
red
squiggle
or
something
like
no
reference
types
and
there's
so
so
much
that
we've
added
that
give
a
better
analysis
of
your
code
so
that,
instead
of
you,
actually
spending
much
more
time
coding
trying
to
get
your
application
to
a
state
where
it's
running
you
get
a
lot
more
of
that
context.
Upfront.
So
hopefully
your
you
do
feel
like
you're
coding,
faster,
but
yeah
I.
A
A
A
We
report
on
metrics
monthly
for
like
performance
in
start-up
time
and
what
we
think
people
are
actually
experiencing
in
the
wild,
and
you
know
the
charts
are
are
always
going
like
up
into
the
left
or
if
it's
performance
down
to
the
left,
but
they
are
typically
pretty
good
and
if
we
see
any
kind
of
regression,
we'll
roll
back
that
flight
or
whatever,
of
course,
that's
not,
including
like
major
servicing
fixes
and
other
stuff
that
we
have
to
find
and
fix,
and
everything
but
I,
16.6
general
stability
I
mean
it
with
GA,
so
it
already
met
a
minimum
bar
of
acceptance,
so
have
to.
B
B
Can
we
make
vs
for
mac
as
fast
as
rider?
Well,
I
think
that
a
lot
of
this
comes
down
to
you,
the
context
and
what
you're
working
to
you
know.
I
think
that
Jordan
might
have
some
more
up-to-date
information
on
out
some
of
that,
but
we
know
we
D
track
vs
from
a
performance,
the
same
way
that
that
we
do
on
vs
for
Windows,
with
the
goal
of
constantly
improving
really
so
we
release
there's.
B
You
know
a
few
key
scenarios
that
you
track
like
time
to
from
f5
to
have
an
application
deployed
and
delays
in
the
editor.
Why
not?
So
we
do
try
to
track
each
of
those
with
each
release,
so
you
try
to
improve
it
and
I
think
that
if
I
recall
correctly,
the
past
few
releases
have
improved
on
performance
quite
a
bit
but
kind
of
in
a
bigger
picture
thing.
What
we're
looking
at
is
in
the
editor.
B
We
went
from
using
the
gtk
editor
to
using
the
native
coco
editor,
which
improve
the
performance
there
quite
a
bit
and
now
we're
looking
to
mean
that
other
parts
of
the
IDE
as
well
so
Coco
is
kind
of
the
it's.
It's
a
WPF
of
Mac,
so
to
speak,
so
it's
a
it's
a
it's
the
UI
layer
for
Mac
and
if
you
use
those
native
controls,
you
get
that
you
know
really
fast
performance.
B
So
the
process
of
porting,
some
of
the
IDE
DS
cocoa,
should
improve
performance
quite
a
bit,
and
you
should
see
some
of
those
improvements.
Incremental
e,
as
we
do
releases
I
think
the
debugger
pack
got
moved
to
cocoa
and
the
past
few
releases
and
some
of
the
adornments
for
debugging
in
the
editor
of
move
to
cocoa
as
well,
and
as
we
do
that
more
and
more,
you
should
see
performance
improvement
improve
as
well.
My.
C
Yeah
I
think
a
big
one
for
us
like
you're,
saying
Kodi
is
the
individual
reports.
The
really
hard
one
with
performance
sometimes
is
that
what
somebody
thinks
this
performance
might
not
be.
What
we
think
we'll
see
some
telemetry,
for
example,
that
tells
us
editor
typing
is
great,
but
then
we'll
hear
reports
that
it's
not
so
the
real
difficulty,
then,
is.
Ok,
let's
observe
some
people
using
the
editor.
Let's.
B
C
Are
we
measuring
the
right
thing?
Are
we
including
the
time
to
actually
render
the
text
or
just
get
the
suggestion
on
the
back
of
the
text
on
the
backend
and
then
the
time
to
draw
it
where's
the
slowdown,
so
reports
about
specific
issues,
you're
saying
that
helps
a
lot
and
typically
you'll
hear
from
us
more
and
more,
even
on
direct
reach
out
to
say:
hey.
Can
we
get
like
30
minutes
of
your
time
and
like
watch,
you
use
it
just
to
observe
things?
C
I
was
always
very
interesting
to
to
watch
and
then
there's
just
stuff
we
didn't
know
was
what
performance
means
to
you
when
we
were
thinking
of
it
another
way.
So
that's
part
of
the
the
mix
here
too.
So
in
the
case
of
Visual
Studio
for
Mac.
If
you
use
our
help
menu
and
there's
a
report,
a
problem
link
in
there
that's
a
great
way
to
get
started
and
report
the
issue,
and
it
can
give
us
log
files,
give
us
a
few
clues,
maybe
even
a
screenshot
and
then
an
easy
way
to
reach
out
to
you.
C
A
I
was
thinking
like,
maybe
we
should
just
wrap
up
the
stream
there's
so
many
questions,
because
we
otherwise
need
to
be
doing
this
all
day.
Let's
do
one
more,
we
could
do
the
is
there
going
to
be
a
cadence
for
enterprises
such
as
the
current
vs
releases
that
are
costing
huge
losses
due
to
breakages
is.
A
So
generally,
if
you're
ever
updating
to
a
new
major
version,
official
studio
I
would
always
do
like
have
one
person
or
a
few
people
on
your
team,
be
trying
it
out
and
updating
and
always
you
should
always
have
the
ability
to
rollback
and
you
can
actually
use
all
vs
installs
or
you
can
use
the
major
vs
and
installs
side-by-side.
So
you
can
still
be
using
like
2017
versus
2019.
A
So
if
you're
ever
trying
to
upgrade
to
a
new
version
and
your
project
is
having
issues
or
anything
like
that,
you
should
be
able
to
roll
back
and
keep
on
using
the
release
that
is
making
your
team
productive.
Hopefully,
there's
not
like
a
huge
when
you're
rolling
out
and
updating
to
the
entire
team
to
leafiest
2018
or
something
like
that.
You've
already
found
any
of
the
issues
and
upgrades
that
your
project
might
need
to
still
keep
the
team
productive.
A
A
Well,
I
think
we
can
wrap
up.
The
name
calls
to
action
where
we
have
cool
features
out
in
preview.
We
have
some
cool
blog
posts
out
on
dotnet
monitor
and
we
have
bill
talks
all
recorded
on
YouTube
that
you
can
go
watch
if
you
were
interested
in
like
seeing
the
whole
rundown
and
sort
of
like
a
45
minute
productivity
talk
focused
on
all
the
things
we
kind
of
chat
about
in
passing
here
with
each
release
and
that
kind
of
thing
thanks
for
joining
everyone.