Hmm. I tried @code for ten minutes, and had such a violent reaction to it that I immediately bought a @JetBrainsRider license. I don't have time for this ducked tape excuse for an editor. I need to get shit done.
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I use
@code for 100% of my JS/Node dev. super happy with it. Rider/Intellij for C#/Go/Kotlin2 replies 2 retweets 4 likes -
Replying to @RogerAlsing @philiplaureano and
Curious. Are you unhappy with the Web/Node/JavaScript support in our tools?
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Replying to @hhariri @philiplaureano and
Intellij feels some what clunkier/heavier, especially at startup. There is a sense of information overload with buttons/icons/views. And I'm unsure if it can be configured to play nice with all JS formatting/linting tools out there. atleast it messed with formatting for me
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Replying to @RogerAlsing @philiplaureano and
It should be . Code most definitely does not provide the same functionality, which things like our indexing requires. I wonder if it's that part when you say it's more lightweight...((cc
@WebStormIDE)1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @hhariri @RogerAlsing and
What kind of problems with linting and formatting you have? The IDE can import most of the code style rules from ESLint and TSLint configs and use them when you type/format the code. And you can also run ESLint/TSLint auto-fix from the editor.
2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
And surely any errors reported by ESLint or TSLint are highlighted in the editor.
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