![]() What I did not expect was that virtually anything that I needed to do in VS Code “just worked” too. VS Code is from Microsoft, so it’s entirely expected that TypeScript would just work. Someone mentioned to me that TypeScript “just works” in VS Code and I was pleasantly surprised to find that they were right. The only reason I even did so is that I was working on a TypeScript project (also quite begrudgingly) and I was tired of fighting with the editor and the compiler and all of the settings that I needed to make a TypeScript project work. These are all the best things about VS Code that nobody ever bothered to tell you.Ībout two years ago, I begrudgingly opened Visual Studio Code (VS Code) for the first time. Why is Visual Studio Code (VS Code) so popular, and do we really need another text editor? In this article, we’ll take a look at how VS Code extends traditional text editor concepts and opens up entirely new avenues of productivity for developers.
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