slazer2au
link
fedilink
222M

I switch between VSCode and Notepad++ depending on what I am doing.

Not sure why you would ditch a program for correctly responding to a security threat.

DacoTaco
link
fedilink
52M

This. At work i use visual studio ( .net wpf/blazor/maui ) with vscode on the side. At home i use vscodium for my .net/c/c++ work and sometimes notepad++ for other c stuff. Depends if i open 1 file quickly or working on a project

@Crampi@sh.itjust.works
creator
link
fedilink
22M

Because I’m looking for FOSS right now

slazer2au
link
fedilink
32M

https://codeium.com/vscode_tutorial

Is the closest. It is literally VSCode without the MS telemetry.

Chris
link
fedilink
92M

Neovim

Same. I’ve had a few big config purges and migrations every few years, but I’m always neovim.

I started using Neovide as a frontend so people could follow what I’m doing (it adds animated cursor movement, etc.) I actually found that I really like it and rarely use a terminal to run neovim now.

Racle
link
fedilink
92M

Neovim (heavily customized configuration) + tmux for me. Switched from Jetbrains IDE and VSCode to this ~5 years ago. I use neovim with every language.

Fast to use, one app for all and I have customized that to my liking and I already spent half of my time in terminal while working anyway. + knowing how to use vim helps a lot when configuring servers remotely.

I use JetBrains IDEs. IntelliJ, Pycharm, Goland, and Webstorm.

@XPost3000@lemmy.ml
link
fedilink
5
edit-2
2M

VSCode cuz I couldn’t find a good open source alternative written in c++ or rust that isn’t just a terminal text editor that needs a trillion plugins/configs to run (I would have tried zed if they ever made a version for windows, seems like the most promising ide to vsc)

VSCodium is the best we can get for now it seems.

I write code every day at my job. I use vim.

It does everything I need it to do, and it works exactly the same way on every system I touch, and functions the same way since I started using it decades ago (aside from being able to use arrow keys now instead of hjkl)

If I HAVE to do any coding on Windows, I use notepad++.

Why not use gvim on Windows? That’s my “IDE” on Windows. Though with modern versions of Windows, trying to run vim in the Command Prompt isn’t a complete disaster like it was in the past.

“IDE” in quotes because I consider vim a text editor, and I don’t try to make it an IDE with a bunch of plugins.

VSCode at work, VSCodium at home

I use emacs for almost everything. It took time to get used to. And some time to configure things. But now I’m just riding off my years old config files and packages I wrote as my use case haven’t changed.

I use python, rust, C, R, jupyter notebook, org mode, latex, markdown, PDFs, xml, org-roam, etc.

Daeraxa
link
fedilink
52M

Pulsar because I am (or at least was and will be, I’ve been a bit absent recently) part of the team developing it. Its a fork of Atom to continue development after GitHub pulled the plug, entirely community developed and focused.

@_ed@sopuli.xyz
link
fedilink
2
edit-2
2M

As an ex atom user I’m using Pulsar right now.

I used and loved Pulsar for a while, it was neat and I enjoyed using it, kudos for your work…

Emacs with evil-mode or when I am banging around the console, neovim.

For an actual IDE, Jetbrains. But I rarely need an actual IDE and will just generally use Vim for everything.

VSCode! I’m yet to find another editor that runs as smoothly on remote machines. Zed has been getting much better at this, but it’s still too buggy to consider a switch.

The 8232 Project
link
fedilink
1
edit-2
24d

Check out VSCodium, which is open source telemetryless binaries of VSCode

Edit: Nevermind, it seems you already use it

I appreciate the thought!

As far as I’ve tested it, vscodium doesn’t support the same remote extensions that vscode does, it’s very silly.

That’s simply due to the repository VSCodium uses to pull extensions from (in the name of using open source extensions). Other (proprietary) extensions can be installed by downloading the .vsx file and installing manually. In most cases, though, open source alternatives to proprietary extensions exist.

While this workaround exists, it breaks Microsoft’s Visual Studio Marketplace terms of use: https://aka.ms/vsmarketplace-ToU :/

I don’t really have a main IDE. I work with python, so on my work PC they got me a PyCharm license.

For everything else, I casually switch between Pulsar (Atom fork), Notepad++, Spyder, and I did some stuff in VSCode. If the project is small and is an aws lambda, I use their web editor

Anything goes really

Helix because it’s simple and works without tweaking it.

Helix. I hate tweaking my ide. I just want to launch it and get to work. Setting up my LSP/formatter/theme is the most i’m willing to put up with and that’s all Helix asks for to be an IDE.

A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions

Search asklemmy 🔍

If your post meets the following criteria, it’s welcome here!

  1. Open-ended question
  2. Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
  3. Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
  4. Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
  5. An actual topic of discussion

Looking for support?

Looking for a community?

Icon by @Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de

  • 0 users online
  • 270 users / day
  • 977 users / week
  • 2.46K users / month
  • 5.61K users / 6 months
  • 1 subscriber
  • 3.07K Posts
  • 119K Comments
  • Modlog