Do keep in mind that except the usability features, you don’t have to get a license if you have no use for “Intellisense” like features, Nuget Packages, debugging and cross Database queries (yes, you can have a query that uses multiple databases). It is free to use, though the free edition has quite a few missing features that make your life so much more comfortable, that I think it’s worth the license price, especially the ability to debug with the Premium license. So LINQPad might sound like a tool that is only for LINQ, but it’s so much more. We are going to go through what it is, and a few examples of what you can do with it. In this post, I discuss one tool that is indispensable from my toolbox (also by popular demand :D), from testing out ideas, to developing custom controls, I default to LINQPad most of the time, and not for just “development” topics.
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