![]() That was until a new challenger appeared… Enter Visual Studio Code… Still, the interface was extremely slick, and the theme support was great, so I persevered with it. Responsiveness became an issue the larger the project became (particularly from an autocomplete standpoint), and numerous other niggles. ![]() The debugging package that was suggested stopped working randomly. I’ve been a massive fan of Sublime Text for years now, and although I switched across to Atom earlier this year for a bit of a trial, there were a lot of things I just missed from my setup in Sublime. When writing code, everyone has a preference for their favourite editor of choice.
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