The visual-studio-15 tag is synonymous with the visual-studio-2015 tag. The former has 21 questions and 5 followers while the latter has 11,879 questions and 1.2k followers. I suggest that we retag all 21 questions (preferred) and possibly remove the tag or make it a synonym to visual-studio-2015.
1 Answer
The visual-studio-15 tag is synonymous with the visual-studio-2015 tag
Don't know about the tags, but VS "15" is definitely not the same product as VS 2015.
VS 2015 is version "14" (not 15), see for example Microsoft Visual Studio - History or MS' own announcement Visual Studio “14” CTP now available from before it was baptized as VS 2015.
Likewise, VS "15" refers to the preview builds of the yet unreleased (and not officially named) next major version of VS. Quoting from the official blog Visual Studio “15” Preview Now Available:
At Build 2016 we shared a preview of the next version of Visual Studio, which we call Visual Studio “15” (not to be confused with Visual Studio 2015).
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Oh really? That's interesting. I wanted to make sure before posting a question. I checked the Microsoft website and it said 'Visual Studio 15, or Visual Studio 2015....' Aug 31, 2016 at 4:02
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@AndrewL. MS has always maintained different (and often confusing) marketing vs. internal versions (for an unrelated example, Office 2013 was version "15" and Office 2016 is version "16"). What's now codenamed VS "15" will be released under its own branding name, yet unknown, when the time comes - but it won't be a patch or update or service pack to VS 2015 for sure.– dxivAug 31, 2016 at 4:15
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1I suspected something like that, which is why I tried to look it up to confirm my suspicion. I guess they got me Aug 31, 2016 at 4:18
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1And I wonder why MS is not thinking of making these names easy to remember! What's the point of creating such confusion?– CinCoutAug 31, 2016 at 4:26
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@CinCout For the same reason that the server version of Windows 8.1 is labeled Windows Server 2012 R2 ;-) I am not MS and can't speak for them, but reasonable guess is that (a) end users don't much care about internal version numbers, and (b) MS' own marketing department doesn't either. After all, "Windows XP" was arguably sexier than "Windows NT 5.1".– dxivAug 31, 2016 at 4:39
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3The choices aren't arbitrary, @Grant. There's a very good reason that VS 2015 is version number 14: it is the 14th major release of the Visual C++ development environment. (Well mostly. They skipped version 3 back in 1995 so VC++ 4 would have the same version number as MFC 4 with which it was bundled.) As for why the marketing department chooses to fluctuate between year names, actual version numbers, and other random monikers, I've no idea. But it'd be even more confusing if the dev team used marketing terms; what if the release date slipped? I've downvoted the proposed synonym into oblivion.– Cody Gray - on strike ModAug 31, 2016 at 11:05
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@CodyGray Not that it matters, but they also skipped version 13 (VS 2013 = v12, 2015 = v14) because somebody must not like that number (they skipped 13 for Office, too, MSO 2007 = v12, 2010 = v14).– dxivAug 31, 2016 at 16:01
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1It is a huge problem, at least in the US market, to sell software numbered 13. Or to have floors in buildings numbered 13.– Cody Gray - on strike ModAug 31, 2016 at 18:39