April 14, 2026
#RetroDev #ASP.NET #WebForms #VisualStudio2010
Or better yet — tell me in the comments: what was the first web project you built with Visual Web Developer Express? — Mike, old-school .NET dev microsoft visual web developer 2010 express
There was no IIS Express yet. VWD 2010 came with its own lightweight development web server. Pressing F5 just worked . It wasn’t the fastest, but it was dead simple.
Microsoft officially ended support for Visual Web Developer 2010 Express years ago, and ASP.NET Web Forms is in maintenance mode. But for many of us, VWD 2010 was our first real introduction to professional web dev without paying $1,000 for a license. If you’re a younger dev and you’ve never seen it, try spinning up a VM with Windows 7 and installing VWD 2010 Express (you can still find the ISO on archive.org). Build a simple GridView with paging and editing. You’ll understand where modern tools like Blazor got their inspiration. April 14, 2026 #RetroDev #ASP
Retro Dev: Building Web Forms with Microsoft Visual Web Developer 2010 Express
For those who weren’t around, Visual Web Developer 2010 Express was Microsoft’s free, lightweight IDE for building ASP.NET Web Forms applications. It was part of the Visual Studio 2010 Express family (alongside C# Express, VB Express, etc.), but tailored specifically for the web. 1. Drag-and-Drop Web Forms You could literally drag a GridView or Login control from the Toolbox onto a .aspx page, wire it up to a SQL Server database using a few wizards, and have a fully functional data grid in minutes. No Web API, no JSON, no client-side frameworks. Just server-side magic. Pressing F5 just worked
Before layout components in React or Angular, we had Master Pages. Define your site header and footer once, and every content page just inherited the layout. It felt revolutionary.