![]() ![]() ![]() So I started using VS Code for all my development work - except for two areas: Magik and VB.Net/C#.Net.Īs I moved away from VB and C# and more into the JavaScript ecosystem, I found I was using either VS Code or emacs for the majority of my tasks. I preferred VS Code’s ability to extend itself with just the functionality I wanted, through its myriad extensions, rather than having things I didn’t use prepackaged. ![]() They were okay, but were slower than VS Code and a bit too heavy for my liking. At the time WebStorm and Atom were popular and I looked at both of them. So I went back to emacs.Ībout 3 years ago I stumbled across VS Code while looking for a better editor to write NodeJS and JavaScript applications. It wasn’t bad, but it was fairly expensive and slower than emacs. I even tried an Eclipse-based product called MDT for about a year. ![]() As such I’ve been using it for more than 25 years.īut what I really wanted to use was a modern editor with features such as context-aware autocomplete, tree-like navigation, outline view, go to definition, hover-to-reveal and all the other modern features to which I had become accustomed using IDEs such as Visual Studio, Until Smallworld 5 was released, emacs was the standard editor with which to write Magik code. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |