well.. back in the day Visual Studio wasn't as fast as it is now.. Yes definitely scripting is a good reason I should have mentioned :) .Net Core developers are a diverse bunch of people. The one on Windows tends to be on Visual Studio. The ones on Mac/Linux (myself included) more sways towards VS Code and other IDEs according to my findings (the not very scientific Twitter polls ;) ). Also you do dotnet new once per project, depends on how many projects you have I guess. Anyway appreciate your perspective Vitaliy
Just to add to this, I'm a Windows user with both full VS and VS code on my laptop. VS code and CLI for the win every day of the week! Full visual studio feels really cumbersome
well.. back in the day Visual Studio wasn't as fast as it is now.. Yes definitely scripting is a good reason I should have mentioned :) .Net Core developers are a diverse bunch of people. The one on Windows tends to be on Visual Studio. The ones on Mac/Linux (myself included) more sways towards VS Code and other IDEs according to my findings (the not very scientific Twitter polls ;) ). Also you do
dotnet new
once per project, depends on how many projects you have I guess. Anyway appreciate your perspective VitaliyJust to add to this, I'm a Windows user with both full VS and VS code on my laptop. VS code and CLI for the win every day of the week! Full visual studio feels really cumbersome
I can understand that feeling