I asked this question about year ago. At that time this answer was correct.
But now Microsoft fixed the problem with C# interactive windows, probably this is correct now. Should I change the accepted answer?
I asked this question about year ago. At that time this answer was correct.
But now Microsoft fixed the problem with C# interactive windows, probably this is correct now. Should I change the accepted answer?
This is a really special case, and to draw meaningful ideas about a generic way to handle this situation from a response would be a mistake.
You asked a question about a preview product, which was answered. Once a product, the product was updated to include the missing functionality. In other words, someone has to still be using the preview version.
In this circumstance I don't think the standard caveats around assuming that everyone one's upgraded and the certainty of necessary questions about older products apply.
I would delete the question and its answers. The answers to your question are some of the more pointless things I've read recently - they're all essentially duplicates of each other and all most of them say is "it's available now". Your question, though maybe relevant at the time, now seems to just be a potential vector for confusion, the reason why you wrote the question initially.