We use PowerShell to call the Azure DevOps API and retrieve Build Artefacts from the last successful build of the repository/repositories that we’re dependent on. Over the last few years
We use PowerShell to call the Azure DevOps API and retrieve Build Artefacts from the last successful build of the repository/repositories that we’re dependent on. Over the last few years
Azure DevOps is pretty sweet. Manage your code, backlog, sprints, builds – the whole caboodle. Also, it has a comprehensive REST API so you can access your data and integrate
Specifically I’m talking about assigning version numbers to your own code and manipulating those versions in CAL / AL and PowerShell. There are lots of different systems for assigning a
Visual Studio Code has moved quickly from “what’s that? Part of Visual Studio? No? Then why did they call it that?” to become the hub of much of my daily
Having spent years developing in C/SIDE I still get a little giddy using Visual Studio Code’s modern IDE features. You know, finding references to a function, renaming symbols, peeking definitions.