I have Crystal Reports 2008. This is the full application, not the Crystal Reports extension embedded into Visual Studio.
This morning I pulled a solution with many projects and many crystal report files into Visual Studio 2010 for the first time. This application originated in VS2003, migrated to VS2005/.NET 2.0, migrated again to VS2008 (still .NET 2.0) and now migrated to VS2010 (still .NET 2.0). Wow everything is SO much faster working with this solution in VS2010. It loads up so quickly. It builds quickly. Hooray. This is exactly why I wanted to ditch VS2008.
I know that Crystal Reports for Visual Studio is no longer embedded in VS2010 (see my earlier blog post Crystal Reports and Visual Studio 2010) but there is an extension you can easily install. I haven’t installed that yet on this machine.
Now it was time to see what happens with my reports.
It was easy. I double clicked on a report in Solution Explorer. The result was that Crystal Reports 2008 started up and the report opened up in that designer.
No fuss no muss. Thank goodness. I’ve been using Crystal Reports for, I dunno, 15 years or so and every time there’s some type of upgrade, it’s been disastrous. But I wasn’t really upgrading the Crystal Reports app, just Visual Studio this time. SO it was 100% painless.
I did have one problem at runtime because I had forgotten that on my 64bit machine, I needed to target x86 when building. Luckily I wrote about this in an article for ASPAlliance last year (Lessons Learned: Sorting out Crystal Reports 2008 Versioning, Service Packs and Deployment). Unfortunately I wasted a few hours wrestling with this problem again before I cam to this realization.
Sign up for my newsletter so you don't miss my conference & Pluralsight course announcements!
Well… congrats to you. I agree… very little about using Crystal Reports is ever easy. So, enjoy it while you can.
That’s great to know as it was something I’ve been worried about. We have an app with about 100 reports. I’ve been using the embedded Crystal Reports up until now, but will look into purchasing the full version. I believe the embedded version for 2010 is going to be available as a separate download later in the year.
ya it is disastrous to use visual studio 2010 Rc because crystal report is missed so do not up grade and continue to use vs 2008
@ba – do you have some evidence of this being a problem? Crystal provides their embedded tool for free as a downlaodable extension.
I’ve tested Crystal Reports 2008 on Visual Studio 2010 RTM, I’ve updated a Windows Form project to .Net 4 Framework, and everything works fine, but I’ve updated a Web project to .Net 4 Framework and Crystal doesn’t work, I downgrade the web project to .Net 3.5 and it works fine.
Some ideas about how could I put to work together Crystal Reports 2008 and ASP.net 4.0?
Hi Diego
I have no experience with Crystal and ASP.NET. It’s all been with windows forms. Sorry.
Julie
Hi Julie,
Is it possible to know what is the extension you installed to make work CR2008 with Visual Studio 2010.
This will solve a lot of problem for me.
Thank you !
Chantal
I don’t remember installing anything special. I already had CR2008 on my computer. Maybe try CR’s forums??
i need how to link sub-report with main report in c#