Ajax Control: Toolkit Visual Studio 2022

Yes, with significant caveats. But you should plan to migrate away. Compatibility Status | Component | Status | |-----------|--------| | Visual Studio 2022 | Partially compatible (manual steps required) | | .NET Framework 4.8 | Fully supported (the toolkit's last compatible runtime) | | .NET 6 / 7 / 8 | ❌ Not supported | | Design-time support | Broken (Toolbox icons missing, drag-and-drop unreliable) | | Runtime behavior | Works if manually registered |

Install-Package AjaxControlToolkit The automatic Toolbox integration is broken. Add this manually: ajax control toolkit visual studio 2022

For existing projects, treat ACT as technical debt. Budget time to refactor those extenders into modern HTML/CSS/JavaScript patterns. Your future self (and your users) will thank you. Have you successfully migrated from ACT? Share your experience in the comments below. Yes, with significant caveats

Introduction The Ajax Control Toolkit (ACT) was once a staple for ASP.NET Web Forms developers. It provided a rich set of 40+ server controls (like CalendarExtender , ModalPopupExtender , and AutoCompleteExtender ) that brought client-side AJAX functionality to traditional postback-heavy web apps. Add this manually: For existing projects, treat ACT

However, with the release of (64-bit) and the continued shift toward .NET Core/.NET 5+, many developers wonder: Does the Ajax Control Toolkit still work?

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