Microsoft Releases Visual Studio Code Preview For Linux, OS X, and Windows
ClockEndGooner writes: Microsoft is still extending its efforts into cross platform development with the release of a preview edition of Visual Studio Code, "a lightweight cross-platform code editor for writing modern web and cloud applications that will run on OS X, Linux and Windows." Derived from its Monaco editor for Visual Studio Online, the initial release includes rich code assistance and navigation for JavaScript, TypeScript, Node.js, ASP.NET 5, C# and many others.
If Microsoft ever does applications for Linux it means I've won.
-- Linus Torvalds
Its not simply Atom, it uses the Monaco editor MS have been using on VS Online for some time, as well as Omnisharp and a few other things - Atom supplies the shell, and Chromium the runtime, but its much more than simply Atom.
I'm no fan of M$, far from it, but despite that I'll be the first to admit that Visual Studio has always been a very good product. You can tell those that write the IDE also use it themselves and know what developers need / want. So a cross platform version is certainly interesting.
Yup, Vim FTW! I particularly like this VIM Cheat Sheet
MS forgot the first rule of programs:
"Those who forget the past are condemned to re-implement it, badly."
So for certain developers like me CodeWritght is still alive
Notepad in Windows 95 had a maximum file size of 64K.
"Microsoft is still extending its efforts into cross platform development" after spending much effort on making everything Windows only.
"It was creating a situation where pure 100% Java applications would look just as good as pure Windows applications which we have to avoid." ref
"possible emergence of a set of API's and underlying system software that lead to lesser or no role for Windows" ref
"How do we wrest control of Java away from Sun?" ref
"This summer we're going to totally divorce Sun" ref