Visual Studio Code (free and open source)
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@fuznutz04 said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
I've been using Brackets on both my Macbook and my Windows box. How does Atom and VS Code compare? Worth switching?
Haven't used Brackets, so can't say.
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Is there any way to have Atom launch Powershell in an external window?
I've found several that will use the built-in "terminal" but that simply does not work for what I need.
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@dafyre said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
Is there any way to have Atom launch Powershell in an external window?
I've found several that will use the built-in "terminal" but that simply does not work for what I need.
No idea. Why do you want to do that? What's the use case?
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@fuznutz04 said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
I've been using Brackets on both my Macbook and my Windows box. How does Atom and VS Code compare? Worth switching?
I didn't think Brackets did anything except for HTML/CSS/JS. Atom and VS Code do many other languages.
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@scottalanmiller said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@dafyre said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
Is there any way to have Atom launch Powershell in an external window?
I've found several that will use the built-in "terminal" but that simply does not work for what I need.
No idea. Why do you want to do that? What's the use case?
Because I can't use it to debug the script properly. I have a script that requires interaction (it shows a menu, waits on the user to make choices, etc).... The Atom powershell interpreter does not actually stop to read input from the user.
Edit: I did find a package that works though... it's called run-in-terminal.
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@stacksofplates said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@fuznutz04 said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
I've been using Brackets on both my Macbook and my Windows box. How does Atom and VS Code compare? Worth switching?
I didn't think Brackets did anything except for HTML/CSS/JS. Atom and VS Code do many other languages.
Brackets does really well with HTML, CSS, JS, and markdown, in my experience.
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@dafyre said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@scottalanmiller said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@dafyre said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
Is there any way to have Atom launch Powershell in an external window?
I've found several that will use the built-in "terminal" but that simply does not work for what I need.
No idea. Why do you want to do that? What's the use case?
Because I can't use it to debug the script properly. I have a script that requires interaction (it shows a menu, waits on the user to make choices, etc).... The Atom powershell interpreter does not actually stop to read input from the user.
Edit: I did find a package that works though... it's called run-in-terminal.
But I can do all of that stuff without this tool, that's where I'm confused.
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@stacksofplates said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@fuznutz04 said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
I've been using Brackets on both my Macbook and my Windows box. How does Atom and VS Code compare? Worth switching?
I didn't think Brackets did anything except for HTML/CSS/JS. Atom and VS Code do many other languages.
Good to know! Just started using Brackets a little bit ago for writing bash scripts. I'll give Atom a go.
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@scottalanmiller said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@dafyre said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@scottalanmiller said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@dafyre said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
Is there any way to have Atom launch Powershell in an external window?
I've found several that will use the built-in "terminal" but that simply does not work for what I need.
No idea. Why do you want to do that? What's the use case?
Because I can't use it to debug the script properly. I have a script that requires interaction (it shows a menu, waits on the user to make choices, etc).... The Atom powershell interpreter does not actually stop to read input from the user.
Edit: I did find a package that works though... it's called run-in-terminal.
But I can do all of that stuff without this tool, that's where I'm confused.
I can too. I'm just lazy. I like being able to hit a button F5, for instance, and have my script run in a new window, without me needing to keep another Powershell window open all the time to just run the script.
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@dafyre said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@scottalanmiller said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@dafyre said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@scottalanmiller said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@dafyre said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
Is there any way to have Atom launch Powershell in an external window?
I've found several that will use the built-in "terminal" but that simply does not work for what I need.
No idea. Why do you want to do that? What's the use case?
Because I can't use it to debug the script properly. I have a script that requires interaction (it shows a menu, waits on the user to make choices, etc).... The Atom powershell interpreter does not actually stop to read input from the user.
Edit: I did find a package that works though... it's called run-in-terminal.
But I can do all of that stuff without this tool, that's where I'm confused.
I can too. I'm just lazy. I like being able to hit a button F5, for instance, and have my script run in a new window, without me needing to keep another Powershell window open all the time to just run the script.
I like to just keep a window open and "up arrow" and hit enter to run something.
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@scottalanmiller said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@dafyre said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@scottalanmiller said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@dafyre said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@scottalanmiller said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
@dafyre said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
Is there any way to have Atom launch Powershell in an external window?
I've found several that will use the built-in "terminal" but that simply does not work for what I need.
No idea. Why do you want to do that? What's the use case?
Because I can't use it to debug the script properly. I have a script that requires interaction (it shows a menu, waits on the user to make choices, etc).... The Atom powershell interpreter does not actually stop to read input from the user.
Edit: I did find a package that works though... it's called run-in-terminal.
But I can do all of that stuff without this tool, that's where I'm confused.
I can too. I'm just lazy. I like being able to hit a button F5, for instance, and have my script run in a new window, without me needing to keep another Powershell window open all the time to just run the script.
I like to just keep a window open and "up arrow" and hit enter to run something.
Then I have to remember to save the file before alt tabbing over to the other window, often lost in a sea of other windows, lol...
http://i.imgur.com/k3RRYtNm.jpgRemember to hit CTRL+S, and then ALT TAB and find the right window... or hit F5 and have it done for me...
Edit: This is Windows, using Dexpot for the Expose type feature.
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Atom is very nice. I have my GIT integrated into it to make things that much simpler.
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@StrongBad said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
Atom is very nice. I have my GIT integrated into it to make things that much simpler.
I need to do that.
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@StrongBad said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
Atom is very nice. I have my GIT integrated into it to make things that much simpler.
Nice. That's become a standard feature or plugin for all these text editors as of late, lol.
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So I've been using Atom for the past few days. I really like it compared to Brackets. Is VS Code worth looking at for those of you who already use Atom?
Also, can someone tag the OP?
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@fuznutz04 said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
So I've been using Atom for the past few days. I really like it compared to Brackets. Is VS Code worth looking at for those of you who already use Atom?
Also, can someone tag the OP?
I tested Code and went back to Atom.
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Any particular reason?
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@fuznutz04 said in Visual Studio Code (free and open source):
Any particular reason?
Lighter, does what I want without lots of extra stuff.