![]() I am watching the lsp-mode and lsp-ui projects. is something that is burnt into my brain. Magit for example, or being able to split your screen up as needed, or quickly jumping between files, etc. It's not perfect, but out-of-the-box experience is nicer.Īfter a few months though working in it, I want to go back to Emacs, and as such, Emacs is usually running. ![]() net core doesn't have a free debugger (as it seems.) I would have to study vscode-omnisharp source to get a clue how the debugger actually works to use it in emacs - something I don't have time for.īut I started to use it more because the autocompletion is nice. I had to start using vscode at a certain level because. ugins"Īlias vspluginload="sh ~/.ugins"Īlias vspluginclean="rm -rf ~/.vscode/extensions" vim hierarchy - but I'm happy.Īlias vspluginsave="code -list-extensions | xargs -L 1 echo code -install-extension >. I'd be much happier if vim support meant understanding my. It's not great, the things in 'vim' support are really 'vi'-light. ![]() I've mapped keys to the 'wierd' collection of things I do between terminator terminals, vim tabs, and whatnot. I have global tasks that now link into workspaces, pretty decent python, golang, and c++ support. ![]() I have git hooks for my homedir's dotfiles that automatically look to see if the plugin cache needs an update one way or the other - and runs my aliases (see below). I have a tonne of tooling around automated python environments, vim plugins (now vscode plugins), tasks - and it's made the whole thing significantly more 'unixy' than it was before. VSCode is the first IDE I've been able to live, and happily. I've been using VI since the 90's and VIM since. ![]()
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