Extension quality can highly vary due to most being created by the community. TypeScript, JavaScript, and Node.js support is top-notch and well polished.Clean editor layout, very easy to get started with initially.Extensions for anything you can imagine.Completely open source, completely free.The editor legitimately can now compete with its much older brother, Visual Studio. Over time extensions have come out for Golang, Rust, Java, and many other languages with each plugin being open sourced. Everything was written in TypeScript, it was open source, and it even launched with great integration for TypeScript. Visual Studio Code was a surprise when it came out, simply being a better version of the existing Electron-based editor Atom. I’m assuming it may be due to the fact that some features are behind the paid version of IntelliJ and the fact that Java isn’t as popular as other languages used for editor plugins (mainly JavaScript.) While the community around developing open source plugins exists, it’s a lot smaller than other editors.The launch time is still longer than most editors.Best Vim integration with an existing IDE I’ve ever seen. The Vim plugin can use normal Vim configuration files, but as far as I understand, it’s still a complete reimplementation of Vim that has had everything I’ve tried with it.Built-in features for most everything that users want.
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