Ndiswrapper is used for hardware drivers in Linux, for example wifi dongles that don’t have a native Linux driver yet. How that could possibly come into play with Visual Studio (especially older ones that probably play very well with Wine because they use more primitive calls)... can you explain? The broader idea would be to switch over to an all Linux development environment as soon as that became possible.
Where did I say ndiswrapper had anything to do with Visual Studio?
All I said is that I did some modelling of development code using the extremely user-friendly environment of the Visual Studio IDE.
When somebody provides as nice an IDE for Linux, I’ll consider using it for modelling.
Meanwhile, for development in the Linux environment, printk() is my friend.