Infrastructure as Code

In this episode, Cameron Skinner joins us to talk about the enhanced dependency graphs in Visual Studio 11. Dependency graphs represent your application structures as nodes and the relationships in your application as links. Cameron shows us how these graphs help you better understand your software so you can most efficiently enhance and maintain it.
That's an amazing new VS11 feature!!
You know another feature that would be cool, if there was an option to change the theme colors back to the really cool default ones in Visual Studios 2010.
You the one with the cool blue gradients and colored icon so you can see in an instant where the debug button was!!
You know I like the way George thinks!
Giddy Up!!
Trying VS11...
What is this!!
Where are the COLORS!! The COLORS!!!
And what's the deal with this UI?! WHAT'S THE DEAL??!!!
the feature maybe nice, but the UI of VS11 is SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO ugly. We need colors, colors, colors!!!!!!!!
The best place to share your UI feedback is the Visual Studio User Voice site. The product team is very interested in what you have to say and is listening.
Robert
I loved the concept in VS 2010 but in practice found the friction was just too great for regular usage. It looks like most of the pain has been eliminated and I'm looking forward to trying it out. Such tooling allows static languages to really shine.
Great high level overview Cameron. I've also included a more in depth look at the dependency graph canvas features here:
Hi, I'd like to know if the dependency graph will work in a visual studio unmanaged C++ project?
@Remi:Yes!
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