Visual Studio Code is the best editor

Visual Studio Code is the best editor

And don't come at me with bullshit like vim or emacs

haha windows

Electron
/thread

>x is the best y
>and don't come at me with or

IntelliJ IDEA Ultimate

haha tranny autistic diaper shitting furry
that's kinda true
what?

Intellij is the best IDE.

>electron
It's shit by design.

>windows user spouting incoherent opinions
POO

>Java IDE
lel
jetbrains makes good ides/code editors tho

i'm not a pajeet, i use windows 10 ltsb
pajeets use windows 7 and ubuntu

>2018
>windows
>taskbar at the bottom

install gentoo faggot

It's shit for C/C++ so it's basically pajeet software

It's really slow when you have a large codebase.

you're just dum

I usually run with VSC, but have been working with Atom recently.

Atom is better desu

...

I don't know how, but somehow Microsoft manages to make every single thing they produce into an unnecessarily complex piece of bloatware. This is a TEXT EDITOR and it's a fucking mess.

>>taskbar at the bottom
What does the position of the taskbar have to do with anything?

Share license

I think is pretty good. Better than Atom or Sublime for sure.

Don't have anymore, got paid for the project I was in. Now I'm in a new project that uses Eclipse.

I'm sorry

its bad use vim

You don't know the half of it, I have to use Eclipse 4.4, have to work in a VM with horrible perfomance and have to use a second laptop to access internet.

>you'll never make a text editor more resource intensive than Eclipse
hold my beer...

Oh and the jenkins server has not enough ressources so during deployment hours a build job takes 3 times as long.
I almost get the feeling I'm working at a state project considering how badly it is run.

Why would you use the VSC editor over the full IDE of Visual Studio?

shitty compilator maybe?

if you use VSC you can compile C with the superior gcc

He's right you know.

it's default

reee

>compilator

This

>not calling it compilatoneer

can relate

>The citrix environment is secure, user. That's why you're programming within it.

>2018
>not using notepad

>not using wordpad for increased productivity

Microsoft Word 2016 is superior in every way.

+dropbox as VCS

>he pays for his software

Good goy!

>pajeets use windows 7 and ubuntu

How would you know that?

what do you have open that you are so embarrassed of to the point of hiding it?

black people porn app.

that's hot

>is the best editor
If you don't need to actually edit text.
That said, it isn't the worst, vim and emacs as well as most open source editors handle big files and long lines much worse.

> vim and emacs [...] handle big files and long lines much worse
Hurr no. Both of these handle files in the order of hundreds of MB to GB (already enormous for text) fine on default settings and can use non-default settings (just settings, it's already builtin) and then plugins to go way beyond that.

lets talk when it can autogenerate code for stuff like variables and methods. for now its babby developer mode

but it can

It's fucking slow. It almost feels like typing in a web browser. Oh wait...

>Check if Sup Forums finally has some actually knowledgeable people posting
>Threads about internet speed, text editors, social status of iPhone vs Android and other menial shit

feels good to know that the modern text editor wars are between vscode, atom and sublime
shows how vim and emacs are dead toys

No, they use Microsoft® Windows® 10

too bad jetbrains have horrible product pricing

link?

Just waiting for the troglodytes to lift their heads out of the swamp and start using Emacs. If anything is dead in the water is all those babby-s first editors

why would you spend months learning vim/emacs when you can use an editor with intuitive controls that requires little to no learning like vs or idea?

So much this

That's not a bad question, actually.
I think a lot of current editor's intuitive controls are intuitive because we grew up with them. Who's to say vim or emacs aren't more intuitive for someone learning text editing from scratch? what if modal editing IS better?
I picked vim up pretty quickly but I'm a fast learner. I did it because I was frustrated with NEdit, it's basically a notepad, and that's what plenty of people at work used (tcl, don't ask)
I can do in vim and emacs things I never could on nedit, kate, or any of your fancy IDEs.
When flycheck didn't have tcl support, I just wrote it and contributed to the project, took only a few hours and now it's forever.
I also like having one program for as many things as possible. maybe the editors you talk about can achieve it, but getting them to work on enterprise machines is such a hassle I tried vim instead, and I don't regret it. Took me on a long road, so maybe I'm positively biased towards it.

i grew up with visual editors and it took me no time to pick up VS, Idea, Eclipse and other popular ones. I also tried both vim and emacs and wanted to kill myself afterwards. All the shortcuts made no sense, seemed like the usability was horrid. I'm sure you can do a bunch of stuff that i can't, yet i doubt that the marginally increased productivity that you theoretically gain will ever amount to the gynormous amount of time you have to spend learning it. Perhaps some mythical tabula-rasa developer would have little trouble with vim/emacs but i think that's quite a stretch, never mind that there is no such person.

Take into account I was spending most of my day at work in a terminal, as a user with no sudo, and writing in Tcl. Taking all of those into account, it's a wonder I didn't kill myself.
I don't see what's the problem with vim. I did the tutorial, started with gvim, and it was pretty much smooth sailing from there. As time went by and I learned more I became more effective with it, but the initial learning curve isn't that steep, so I don't know about your gynormous estimation.
And yes, the first time I tried vim I shit bricks, but I was interested and tried again, and I'm happy that I did.
Just looking at any of the fancy new editors makes my eyes bleed and blinds me with all the useless crap heaped onto them, not to mention that I don't have much computing power to run my editors on so a racing car can make my vm shit itself. It can even choke on a tmux session if it's been running for too long (over 180 days)

do you shit in the alley behind the company or in front of it?

seems you come from a more "hardcore" background than me. My hobbies were gaming and light programming when i was bored of gaming and that grew into a profession for me. Fast and easy was the way forward. So i suppose to each their own. I don't think i would have the patience to switch to a modal editor. I don't even know what feature they have that i would use often enough to warrant spending time on it. At this point it seems like a tabs vs spaces debate. (tabs all the way)

Vim is great because browsing through the code is much faster than with a mouse. Which is what everyone spends most of their time on, going back and forth to read stuff and think about it.
And then being able to jump to an accurate position without raising your hand from the keyboard makes it very efficient.

well, that's what bookmarks and go-to commands are for. I do sometimes use the mouse to move around, mostly when i need to open a new file, but when i have all the stuff i need open the mouse is unnecessary in any editor worth it's salt.

Ah fuck off m8 this project is for one of the largest companies in Germany and this is supposed to replace their old core system.
I was really shocked to see this, you would assume that big companies have good infrastructure.