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I'm in love with VS Code for some reason!

Comments
  • 4
    Maybe because it's amazing :)
  • 1
  • 0
    May because you can sorta feel like at home(sublime) ☺
  • 3
    Because it's fucking great.

    https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/... Thank me later.
  • 1
    Wow! That's so cool and handy! @drRoss
  • 0
    Don't forget to turn indentation on in user settings too, so you get the dots as well.
  • 0
    Yeah! I figured :) thanks tho @drRoss
  • 0
    Yeah! I figured :) thanks tho @drRoss
  • 3
    I love that it's much faster compared to atom
  • 1
    Well that's a fact I have to admit aswell, I loved atom in the past tho, but vs code is definitly better ;) @wahr
  • 1
    Im having trouble with this because I effing love Sublime Text 3. Someday I will have to try it...
  • 0
    Webstorm IDE for the win! Just started using it for my JS code. Integrates with everything. Wonderful for writing modular code because moving between files and finding method definitions is so easy.
  • 0
    Me too! Works great for debugging both JavaScript and Python.
  • 0
    I just started using vs code - really cool!
  • 0
    It's really great, lightweight, supports debugging, and nice API for extensions. Just published mine today :)
  • 0
    @CookieDev hey ,may I know which os is you are using ? Win/linux? it is bcoz the vscode is definiately faster than atom in Windows i am but not sure in Linux...
  • 0
    Hey @logickee, I use windows! Didn't even know there was a version for linux so far?:)
  • 1
    @logickee They're pretty much the same on both OS's. If anything, I think it's even faster on linux.
  • 0
    I agree with that... logical wise it should be linux @goofle
  • 0
    @goofle right now I tried myself...damn fast and I think I will switch to vscode.... (My env: apricity Linux)
  • 0
    @logickee Though I don't use vs code as my primary editor (nothing compares to sublime, really), I like the simple git integration, accompanied by the git log extention. Since I've installed, never once I committed anything through terminal. So I have both sublime and vs code open every coding hour :)
  • 1
    @logickee Yes, it is faster than Atom in Linux
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