• magic_lobster_party@fedia.io
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          2 months ago

          What’s different between Vscode and other editors like Vim is how easy it is to make it a fully fledged IDE. Usually a notification pops up about analyzers being available, and if you click accept it’s done. Just one click of a button.

          With Vim it’s not that easy. You need to install many separate plugins just to make it a fraction of an IDE.

        • onnekas@sopuli.xyz
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          2 months ago

          You could call vscode a “DIY IDE Building Kit” because everybody is using it that way.

          After you put all the extensions together you basically got a fully featured “IDE” for most languages out there.

          Nobody I know uses vscode like a simple “code editor”.

        • nogooduser@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          I think that whether it needs plugins or not to do the job isn’t really relevant.

          You can develop software in a large number of languages including writing the code (with intelligent code completion), building it, committing it to source control and running and debugging it.

          If it didn’t use plugins to do that then it’d huge and take ages to start up.

    • masterspace@lemmy.ca
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      2 months ago

      It’s literally listed in stack overflow’s section on IDEs, functions as a replacement for an IDE, was architected so that plugins can turn it into an IDE, and is distributed with plugins made by the same company that turn it into an IDE. Insisting that it’s not an IDE in this context isnt helping anyone communicate, it’s just being pedantic.