Visual Studio Code April 2017(code.visualstudio.com) |
Visual Studio Code April 2017(code.visualstudio.com) |
Especially when you compare the rate of improvement of VSCode to Sublime or Atom, VSCode is on an upwards track, and they've clearly captured major mindshare. (https://stackoverflow.com/insights/survey/2017#technology-mo...)
In addition, VSCodeVim is among the best in terms of vim plugins that I've used (VSVim is still better), and I thought it was amazing that Microsoft assigned an official employee to work on it.
Disclaimer: I have contributed code to the VSCodeVim extension, but that was because I liked the plugin so much (that, and there was a bug that really bothered me).
[0] https://code.visualstudio.com/Docs/supporting/faq#_how-to-di...
[1] http://stackoverflow.com/questions/40451596/visual-studio-co...
I suspect VSCode, just like NETCore will become their standard. I'm sure they have a path to switchover. They are banking on Azure now, so anything that pulls people to Azure is what they are investing in.
The biggest difference I can see between the Gates/Balmer era and the Nadella era is Gates/Balmer refused to do anything that would in any way endanger their Windows platform. This made them a ton of money for many years, but stole from their future as Linux took over the server side.
(Disclosure: I work for Microsoft, but not on VS, VS Code, VS Online or VS Floor Wax.)
I don't think this is true at all. I don't think VSCode has any Visual Studio code in it at all, but that's probably why they are able to be so nimble with it - no legacy cruft.
Not everyone can do that, so it would be better if the framework was 'fast by default'.
VS Code is an awesome editor and is improving at an equally awesome pace. Kudos to Microsoft and the team behind it.
Great way to win back share of mind of developers.
Smart, Microsoft.
Except `super` :)
There is an OpenVim Plugin to CtrlP into gvim.
:! code %
When I spawned vim first.Thanks for everything you do!
It let's me try out the benefits of type checking without having to setup TypeScript.
It won't open in Archive Utility because it's an app. I can run Electron from within it's package, and it opens VS Code, but that seems janky.