Visual Studio Code: HTML, CSS & JS Tips




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27 responses to “Visual Studio Code: HTML, CSS & JS Tips”

  1. Good to know Visual Studio has EMMET install by default.I just came across your video and saw something unique the way you taught, therefore without watching other videos, I'm subscribing to watch rest of your videos.I'll also advise my friends to do exactly the same.Thanks a lot

  2. Brad, thanks for that. I've been using VS code for a while now, and needed a refresher on the basics. For me it is too complicated by half, with too many features that I haven't switched on, with no idea what they do or how to turn them off. Things still often happen by surprise. I recently got in a pickle with a split screen and couldn't figure out how to get out of it.
    Thanks again but I think I will pass on the scones.

  3. Recently got my hands on VSC and it's really quite good.
    I'm a bit picky about one thing that bothers me and sorry if I made a big deal out of it but…

    The only issue I'm disappointed about is the live server extensions. That feature that basically lets you edit the code live on your website. The one that you basically don't have to refresh or save everytime. Well in VSC, it didn't quite meet my expectation because I was hoping it would function similar to Brackets' live server feature.

  4. It's really good, but it still sucks compared to intellij. No autoimport of packages, jumping between function calls is painful and vim plugin is buggy. Overall it's good, I love live share and haven't seen something like it in intellij, yet intellij support for JavaScript still wins…

  5. For some reason I came across your video. Your clear presentation caused be to look at vs code again and this time I got it… This editor is fantastic. In one morning I sorted out several issues I struggled with for months. Thank you.

  6. emmet existed long before vs code appeared, zen mode (non distraction mode), exists in many editors, typings are supported by other editors as well, git client is much more convenient in other editors, conclusion: use webstorm if you are a real pro

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