

1 extension for Visual Studio and one of our flagship products," Ellis said. Project Rider will result in increased efforts in ReSharper. Regarding support, there are no announcements for Visual Basic or F# in Project Rider at this point, but CoreCLR is in the plan. The company has been working for several years to allow ReSharper to function in different environments separately from Visual Studio.

JetBrains is developing Project Rider because it wants to provide choice, Ellis said. We've got a lot of functionality already implemented, but we've still got a lot that we need to build." We're confident of the architecture and believe we've built a good foundation to implement the features we want to see in a 1.0 release. A private early-access program is planned for late February. Project Rider's licensing model is still being worked out, although Ellis claims a pricing model will be released soon. ReSharper serves as JetBrains' Visual Studio extension, analyzing code quality and providing quick fixes. Net or Mono the front end is written in Kotlin, talking to the IntelliJ platform's APIs. "The difference, however, is that instead of re-implementing ReSharper's features on the IntellIJ platform, which runs on the JVM, we're using ReSharper in a headless mode, out of process, and communicating with it via a very fast custom binary protocol." The back end of Project Rider is written in C# running on. "Project Rider is a stand-alone IDE built on the IntelliJ Platform, much like WebStorm, DataGrip, and our other IDEs," JetBrains' Matt Ellis said in a blog post this week. Early features include smart navigation and a range of editing features, including typing assist, code inspections, refactorings, and a decompiler. Net IDE from JetBrains and leverages the company's IntelliJ and ReSharper development technologies. JetBrains is developing a cross-platform IDE for C# that could serve as a potential rival to Microsoft's own Visual Studio IDE.Ĭode-named Project Rider, the IDE constitutes a.
