I'm partial to the Emacs keybindings (old habits die hard) and this little crates.io helper that points out outdated version numbers in your Cargo.toml for a Rust project.
Aside from that, I have been thrilled at how well-featured the "defaults" for each language I use are. When I open a file in a language I haven't used in VS code, generally searching the language name and installing the top extension is absolutely everything I need to do. It's almost embarrassing how long I used to spend tweaking configs to get closer to what VS Code does out of the box.
After graduating with a Law Degree, I decided to stick with my passion for software engineering. Currently focused on learning Javascript. Itβs a dream to be able to master it enough to teach it.
I'm partial to the Emacs keybindings (old habits die hard) and this little crates.io helper that points out outdated version numbers in your
Cargo.toml
for a Rust project.Aside from that, I have been thrilled at how well-featured the "defaults" for each language I use are. When I open a file in a language I haven't used in VS code, generally searching the language name and installing the top extension is absolutely everything I need to do. It's almost embarrassing how long I used to spend tweaking configs to get closer to what VS Code does out of the box.
Thanks Ben, I would agree VSC is amazing out of their box.