![]() ![]() Each of these editors is based on Electron - a framework for creating "native" desktop apps with web technologies - HTML, CSS, JS - with the addition of Node.js. For those of you who don't know - here's a little info.īoth the VS Code and Atom are open-source code editors, originally created by Microsoft and GitHub respectively. Some backgroundīecause your reading this post I bet you already know at least something about Atom and VS Code. As the first two are paid ones and provide a similar set of features to extendable editors like VS Code and Atom, most people will be deciding between these. Long story short, I settled down upon VS Code, yet I still have the 3 others of my favorite code editors installed, these are WebStorm, Sublime Text, and Atom. just to find the most comfortable one for me to use. Maybe I don't need an IDE, but it didn't stop me from trying more than 10 different text editors - simple ones, IDEs, VIM-like and more. Now, when it comes to comfort, it's a whole another story. In the JS ecosystem, all tools are just enough intuitive and easy to use, so that I don't need any kind of special IDE or any other layer of abstraction over them. In my case, as I'm mostly doing web development, I don't need anything special. Whether it's a GUI-based or terminal-based, IDE or not and etc. I'm talking about software - the text editor. I think we can all agree that there's one thing every programmer needs, and no, I'm not talking about the computer - it's too obvious. ![]()
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