C and C++ in Visual Studio

Note

This developer documentation applies to Visual Studio 2022. To see the documentation for your preferred version of Visual Studio, use the Version selector control. It's found at the top of the table of contents on this page.

If you're looking for a Microsoft Visual C++ Redistributable package so that you can run a program, see the latest supported Visual C++ downloads.

Note

This developer documentation applies to Visual Studio 2019. To see the documentation for your preferred version of Visual Studio, use the Version selector control. It's found at the top of the table of contents on this page.

If you're looking for a Microsoft Visual C++ Redistributable package so that you can run a program, see the latest supported Visual C++ downloads.

Note

This developer documentation applies to Visual Studio 2017. To see the documentation for your preferred version of Visual Studio, use the Version selector control. It's found at the top of the table of contents on this page.

If you're looking for a Microsoft Visual C++ Redistributable package so that you can run a program, see the latest supported Visual C++ downloads.

Note

This developer documentation applies to Visual Studio 2015. To see the documentation for your preferred version of Visual Studio, use the Version selector control. It's found at the top of the table of contents on this page.

If you're looking for a Microsoft Visual C++ Redistributable package so that you can run a program, see the latest supported Visual C++ downloads.

Microsoft Visual C++ (MSVC) refers to the C++, C, and assembly language development tools and libraries available as part of Visual Studio on Windows. These tools and libraries let you create native Windows desktop and server applications, Universal Windows Platform (UWP) apps, or managed apps and libraries that use the .NET Framework. Create cross-platform libraries and apps that run on Windows, Linux, Android, and iOS. You can use MSVC to write anything from simple console apps to the most sophisticated and complex apps for Windows desktop. Write device drivers and operating system components or cross-platform games for mobile devices. Target anything from the smallest IoT devices to multi-server high performance computing in the Azure cloud.

Visual Studio 2015, 2017, 2019, and 2022 can be installed side-by-side. You can use Visual Studio 2019 (compiler toolset v142) or Visual Studio 2017 (v141) to edit and build programs using the toolset from Visual Studio 2017 (v141) and Visual Studio 2015 (v140).

What's new for C++ in Visual Studio

What's New for C++ in Visual Studio 2022
Find out what's new in Visual Studio 2022.

What's New for C++ in Visual Studio 2019
Find out what's new in Visual Studio 2019.

What's New for C++ in Visual Studio 2017
Find out what's new in Visual Studio 2017.

What's New for C++ in Visual Studio 2003 through 2015
Find out what was new in C++ for each version of Visual Studio from 2003 through 2015.

C++ conformance improvements in Visual Studio
Learn about C++ conformance improvements in Visual Studio.

Microsoft C/C++ language conformance
Find feature-level language conformance status in the MSVC compiler by Visual Studio version.

Microsoft C/C++ change history 2003 - 2015
Learn about the breaking changes in previous versions.

Install Visual Studio C++ and upgrade from earlier versions

Install C++ support in Visual Studio
Download Visual Studio and install the Microsoft C/C++ toolset.

Microsoft C++ porting and upgrading guide
Guidance for porting code and upgrading projects to Visual Studio 2015 or later. Take advantage of greater compiler conformance to the C++ standard, greatly improved compilation times, and security features such as Spectre mitigation.

C++ tools and features in Visual Studio editions
Find out about different Visual Studio editions.

Supported platforms
Find out which platforms the Microsoft C/C++ compiler supports.

Learn C++ using Visual Studio

Welcome back to C++
Learn more about modern C++ programming techniques based on C++11 and later that enable you to write fast, safe code and avoid many of the pitfalls of C-style programming.

Standard C++
Learn about C++, get an overview of Modern C++, and find links to books, articles, talks, and events

Learn Visual Studio and make your first C++ project
Start learning how to write C++ in Visual Studio.

Visual Studio C++ samples
Information about the C++ code samples provided by Microsoft.

Visual Studio C/C++ development tools

Overview of C++ development in Visual Studio
How to use the Visual Studio IDE to create projects, edit code, link to libraries, compile, debug, create unit tests, do static analysis, deploy, and more.

Projects and build systems
How to create and configure Visual Studio C++ projects, CMake projects, and other kinds of projects with MSVC compiler and linker options.

Writing and refactoring C++ code
How to use the productivity features in the C++ editor to refactor, navigate, understand and write code.

Debugging native code
Use the Visual Studio debugger with C++ projects.

Code analysis for C/C++ overview
Use SAL annotations or the C++ Core Guidelines checkers to perform static analysis.

Write unit tests for C/C++ in Visual Studio
Create unit tests using the Microsoft Unit Testing Framework for C++, Google Test, Boost.Test, or CTest.

Write C/C++ applications using Visual Studio

Desktop applications (C++)
Learn how to create traditional native C++ desktop applications for Windows.

.NET programming with C++/CLI
Learn how to create DLLs that enable interoperability between native C++ and .NET programs written in languages such as C# or Visual Basic.

Universal Windows Apps (C++)
Find guides and reference content on the Windows Developer Center. For information about developing UWP apps, see Intro to the Universal Windows Platform and Create your first UWP app using C++.

Linux programming
Use the Visual Studio IDE to code and deploy to a remote Linux machine for compilation with GCC.

Create C/C++ DLLs in Visual Studio
Find out how to use Win32, ATL, and MFC to create Windows desktop DLLs. Provides information about how to compile and register your DLL.

Parallel programming
Learn how to use the Parallel Patterns Library, C++ AMP, OpenMP, and other features that are related to multithreading on Windows.

Security best practices
Learn how to protect applications from malicious code and unauthorized use.

Cloud and web programming
In C++, you have several options for connecting to the web and the cloud.

Data access
Connect to databases using ODBC and OLE DB.

Text and strings
Learn about working with different text and string formats and encodings for local and international development.

C/C++ language reference

C++ language reference
The reference guide to the Microsoft implementation of the C++ programming language.

C language reference
The reference guide to the Microsoft implementation of the C programming language.

C/C++ preprocessor reference
A common reference to the shared C and C++ language preprocessor.

C++/CX language reference
The reference guide to the Microsoft extensions to the C++ language for creating C++ Universal Windows Platform apps, C++ Windows runtime components that can be consumed by JavaScript-based Windows apps, and Windows DirectX games and graphics-intensive apps.

C++/CLI language reference
The ECMA standard for the C++/CLI programming language.

Compiler intrinsics and assembly language
Guides to the compiler intrinsics supported or implemented by the Microsoft C/C++ compilers on each platform.

C/C++ libraries available in Visual Studio

The following sections provide information about the different C and C++ libraries that are included in Visual Studio.

C runtime library reference
Includes security-enhanced alternatives to functions that are known to pose security issues.

C++ standard library
The C++ Standard Library.

Active Template Library (ATL)
Support for COM components and apps.

Microsoft Foundation Class (MFC) libraries
Support for creating desktop apps that have traditional or Office-style user interfaces.

Parallel Patterns Library (PPL)
Asynchronous and parallel algorithms that execute on the CPU.

C++ AMP (C++ Accelerated Massive Parallelism)
Massively parallel algorithms that execute on the GPU.

Windows Runtime Template Library (WRL)
Universal Windows Platform (UWP) apps and components.

.NET programming with C++/CLI
Programming for the common language runtime (CLR).

Third-party open source C++ libraries in Visual Studio

The cross-platform vcpkg command-line tool greatly simplifies the discovery and installation of over 900 C++ open source libraries. For more information, see vcpkg.

Visual Studio C++ feedback and community

Microsoft Learn Q&A
Microsoft Learn hosts searchable forums for questions and answers. Add a C++ tag to your post for community assistance on C++-related issues.

How to report a problem with the Microsoft C/C++ toolset
Learn how to create effective error reports against the Microsoft C/C++ toolset (compiler, linker, and other tools), and ways to submit your report.

Microsoft C++ Team Blog
Learn more about new features and the latest information from the developers of the C++ tools in Visual Studio.

Visual Studio C++ Developer Community
Get help, file bugs, and make suggestions for C++ in Visual Studio.