![Visual Visual](https://blog.xamarin.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/VS_for_Mac.png)
![Visual Visual](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/devops/organizations/projects/_img/connect-projects-tfs/ic658167.png?view=vsts)
Android and iOS are focal points in latest technology rollouts from Microsoft's recent acquisition.
The AWS Toolkit for Visual Studio is an extension for Microsoft Visual Studio running on Microsoft Windows that makes it easier for developers to develop, debug, and deploy.NET applications using Amazon Web Services. With the AWS Toolkit for Visual Studio, you'll be able to get started faster and be more productive when building AWS applications. The AWS Toolkit for Visual Studio 2017 is available via the Visual Studio Marketplace. The AWS Toolkit for 2013 and 2015 is contained in the AWS SDK and Tools for.NET install package. At this time, the AWS Toolkit for Visual Studio does not support Visual Studio for Mac.
AWS Elastic Beanstalk Use the AWS Toolkit for Visual Studio to develop, debug, then deploy your.NET web applications using a web application template. Use Visual Studio to build and run your application locally before deploying to AWS Elastic Beanstalk. AWS Lambda and Amazon API Gateway Create serverless applications with minimal administration and event-driven scaling with C# and Node.js using AWS Lambda and Amazon API Gateway. Amazon Elastic Container Service Easily build, register and deploy.NET Core Docker applications to the Amazon Elastic Container Service without ever leaving Visual Studio. AWS Explorer The AWS Explorer lets you manage your AWS resources.
Including your Amazon S3 Objects, Amazon DynamoDB Tables and EC2 instances. CloudFormation Editor Create new.NET web applications using an application template. Use Visual Studio to build with the convenience of IntelliSense and deploy to AWS with AWS CloudFormation. Project Templates The AWS Toolkit for Visual Studio includes project templates for AWS Lambda functions, AWS CloudFormation templates and sample projects showing how to use various AWS services.
TFS can use either TFVC (Team Foundation Version Control) or Git for the source control part. You don't have to use an external Git server, it has an internal one - with the data stored in the TFS SQL database. You create your first repo when you create the Team Project, but you can add repos later and you can mix TFVC and Git repos in the same Team Project - since 2015.2 I think. Microsoft is still in the denial and marketing speak phase but TFVC is basically dead, even Microsoft is using Git for all their new repos. I'm ready to bet Visual Studio Code and Visual Studio for Mac will never connect to TFVC. Edit: I lost my bet for Visual Studio Code, it can connect to TFVC using the since version 1.116.0 (2017/04/12).