Visual Studio 2012, 2010, 2008 and 2005 Professional Edition
Hoping somebody will come along who knows all of them, I'll give a first answer. There are many versions of Microsoft Visual Studio. Versions been published every year or two since the late 1990's.
Microsoft has Visual Studio 2005, 2008, and (in beta) 2010. There are also older versions. There is no Visual Studio 2007. (Are you talking about Office 2007?)
You can have Visual Studio 2005, 2008, and 2010 installed on a single PC without conflict.
Visual Studio 2008 was produced by Microsoft. One of the new features of Visual Studio 2008 was to enable the user to build applications that target multiple versions of the NET Frame
The software Visual Studio was introduced by Microsoft to consumers in 1995. There have been nine newer versions released since, the most recent being Visual Studio 2012 in September 2012.
Following is the list of versions of visual studio:Product nameVersionVisual Studio4.0Visual Studio 975.0Visual Studio 6.06.0Visual Studio .NET (2002)7.0Visual Studio .NET 20037.1Visual Studio 20058.0Visual Studio 20089.0Visual Studio 201010.0
Visual studio 2010 supports 5 programming languages. These are Visual Basic, Visual C#, Visual C++, Visual F# and JScript.
The latest version is Microsoft Visual Studio 2012(.NET 4.5)Although, this is still in beta testing.It is available for free from Microsoft.Update: Microsoft Visual Studio 2012 is no longer is beta. Microsoft Visual Studio 2012 Express is available for free (www.microsoft.com/express).
The latest version of Visual Studio is Visual Studio 2008 (v9.0).
The .ncp file is Visual Studio is an internally maintained file that controls IntelliSense, amongst other things. IntelliSense is the popup window that shows you syntax and arguments for functions and other things. It is safe to delete, so long as you are not running Visual Studio. Sometimes, in older versions of Visual Studio, problems with IntelliSense can be fixed by deleting the .ncp file and the restarting.
Yes. Visual Studio 2005 supports running on service pack 2. However, there is absolutely no good reason not to install service pack 3.
There are several possibilities when it comes to BASIC. One of them is Visual Studio Visual Basic from Microsoft. There are free versions, and there are paid versions, depending on what you want to do. See the Related Link below for more information. If you want the free version, follow the links for the Express editions.