I think it is on general release see:
https://devblogs.microsoft.com/visualstudio/visual-studio-2019-code-faster-work-smarter-create-the-future/?utm_source=vs_developer_news&utm_medium=referral
I'm just finding it odd that it is going to another preview on my machine...I'll see what it does, it curently doing the next update...
The more I poke around it looks like the official announcement is still in progress, by doing live launch events. Various locations in the US and Canada already held events. The one at/near MS HQ in Redmond, WA, USA is still ongoing, with lunch happening at this time.
@Grey Wolf, since you already have the preview version installed, how do you like it? Better than VS 2017?
Furry Guy, I'm not a fan...of the new project dialog...yet. It will probably grow on me. I'm not sure that I see major differences between them (VS 2017 Enterprise and VS 2019 Enterprise Preview), this to me is a good thing, I like subtle improvements over mass change.
I use the Community edition, and I agree about subtle, "behind the scenes" inner workings improvements. The list I've briefly glanced at looks promising for improving the guts of VS.
As long as I can start a new empty project without having precompiled headers turned on and can select C++ Console/Windows target I can learn to deal with a revised new project dialog.
I still have Preview (trying to find out if I have to remove preview and install the release version or if it will update itself in time).
In preview it goes to a 'start window'...has the list for open recent and get started (new projects, open solutions etc. if you don't have this in might be set here: Options->Environment->startup has options for Start windows, most recent solution, or empty environment.
The default Start window does have the recent projects list.
I don't like having to answer a splash-screen dialog before the program launches is all. And without the in-the-background start page 2017 has I have to re-launch the dialog to see what I was working on.
That is more user-hostile than user-friendly. IMO.
I recognize this is the initial release of 2019, I'm hoping what I see as rough edges get smoothed out.
You'd think making the change-over easy to do would be one of the last things done just before the release happened, but this is MS we are talking about.
WHOA! VS 2019 does have a start page, like 2017's. It is a hidden menu item.
I was mucking around with the keyboard shortcut macros and found two commands File.StartWindow and File.StartPage. I assigned a two step keyboard shortcut to the StartPage.
Used the shortcut and *BAM!* The "Start Page!"
Now, if only activating the start page wasn't a hidden menu item.