I've used VS Code and I think coc is just as good at LSP for JS, React snippets and C# (only languages I've been using since switch).
In addition it's the most familiar since the eslint and prettier plugins gives you the same warnings and formatting as you would running the linter/ formatter in cmd.
The biggest hurdle is to learn how to use vim though.
I'm very comfortable with Vim, and I use the plugin in vs code. I'd go back to Vim if these plugins make the experience similar. Thanks for the feedback
Oh no, I didn't take it that way! Just clarifying that the Vim part is what I want in my life, but the other features are keeping me in VS Code.
And don't worry, I've been using Vim for years and still catch myself holding down j. Then I catch it, move back up, and use a line number to reinforce the better habits.
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I've used VS Code and I think coc is just as good at LSP for JS, React snippets and C# (only languages I've been using since switch).
In addition it's the most familiar since the eslint and prettier plugins gives you the same warnings and formatting as you would running the linter/ formatter in cmd.
The biggest hurdle is to learn how to use vim though.
I'm very comfortable with Vim, and I use the plugin in vs code. I'd go back to Vim if these plugins make the experience similar. Thanks for the feedback
Sorry I didn't mean to imply you don't know how to use vim.
I meant that I'm not even that comfortable with vim and still need to remind myself to not hold down 'j' and use the line numbers 😅
Oh no, I didn't take it that way! Just clarifying that the Vim part is what I want in my life, but the other features are keeping me in VS Code.
And don't worry, I've been using Vim for years and still catch myself holding down j. Then I catch it, move back up, and use a line number to reinforce the better habits.