“If you then install SQL Server 2012 and choose “SQL Server Data Tools” on the Feature Selection page, it will install SSDT-BIDS. Before installing SSDT for Visual Studio 2017 (15.5.2), uninstall the 'Microsoft Analysis Services Projects. In your 3rd paragraph from the end, you mention the following: SSDT can also be installed in a separate VS 2017 shell if you didnt have VS 2017 Pro, in which case the subtitle would be 'Microsoft SQL Server Data Tools for Visual Studio 2017 (SSDT)' instead of 'Visual Studio Professional 2017'. I understand that I will get the SSDT-DB installed. (I’m not upgrading at this time to SP1 because of many issuesĢ- Visual Studio 2010 professionnal + SP1ģ- SSDT using the installer downloaded from the web (June 2013 edition) – I uncheck the SSDT from the “select features” panel Just to be sure, if I install SQL Server 2012 and Visual Studio 2010 in the following sequence: I myself spent a couple of hours trying to figure out which package to install. I agree that Microsoft should have clarified things around SSDT. It notices that you already installed the Visual Studio 2010 Integrated Shell and won’t install it again. If you then install SQL Server 2012 and choose “SQL Server Data Tools” on the Feature Selection page, it will install SSDT-BIDS. If you have not installed SQL Server 2012 (or you did install it but did not select “SQL Server Data Tools” on the Feature Selection page), and go to to download and install SSDT, it will automatically install the Visual Studio 2010 Integrated Shell, apply SP1, and install SSDT-DB, but does NOT install SSDT-BIDS. Then after wasting much time I realized I still needed to install SSDT-DB. I did not realize I was missing the database project functionality until I could not find the SQL Server Object Explorer window in Visual Studio. So to install SSDT-DB, follow Install SQL Server Data Tools. Instead of installing SSDT-DB it installs a pointer to a web install that you will see when you try to create a new database project in Visual Studio 2010 (in other words it installs a “stub project” that allows SQL Server 2012 users to acquire the latest SSDT version from the web). If you go thru the SQL Server 2012 installation and choose “SQL Server Data Tools” on the Feature Selection page, it will install SSDT-BIDS as well as the Visual Studio 2010 Integrated Shell (the Integrated Shell will only contain SSDT tools, and does not include VS programming languages and the features that support their respective project systems), it then applies SP1, but does NOT install SSDT-DB.
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