Hello, I am a chef cook, and these are the tools I use. For cutting, I use dont use a knife, but a butter knife because it's light weight and I like the feel I get from it. For serving food, I use a dish. And lastly, to transport the food to my mouth, I usually use a fork. Let me know if you want to learn more about the tools I use as a chef!
@@shhdev What you're calling GNU + Linux is infact really trash. What I prefer is LLVM/Linux or MacOS. Or better yet Windows 11, cuz Corsair just cant seem to notice people want linux support :| and nobody has REd the commander pro software mode yet afaik
@@shhdev as a seasoned programmer that’s uses "Linux” everyday we have just taken to calling all Linux distros Linux and it won't stop so allow people to be
I don't get it, compared to any ide vscode it's way lighter and faster, but to be fair we have to compare it only with code editors Then vscode is the best code editor nowadays
@@oscardbg9654you might think it is good, I don't, but that is subjective opinions. But VSCode use way more resources then any other editor I have ever used. That can be measured and objectively compared. So don't lie about your objective choice if editor. It doesn't make your choice any stronger. It just show that you have not tried any comparable editor.
Well, it's not heavy unless you have an old cpu, like an fx6300 If you have an decent pc and are still facing instability/lag issues on vscode, you should definitely disable hardware acceleration.. I've had a lot of instability issues on vscode (even on high end pc), and disabling hardware acceleration fixed most if not all of them.. hope this helps, vscode is really really great
@@savagemode2150 hey vscode is great but calling it lightweight is far from the truth, i forgot what its code based of but basically it is known to be a memory hoarding, it will try to use as much ram as possible on your pc when open for long
@@spooky4655 really? I dont usually get more than 500mb ram usage.. btw its built on electron my brotha I work on a startup that has a bunch of pcs with ryzen 5 2400g, no gpus, 8 gb ram, and all of them runs vscode pretty decently Yeah I know its not like sublime, brackets or vim, but still don't think its heavy.. Unless you have an really old pc, as I said 😂
@@lunascomments3024 Getting lightweight feeling are totally different thing that lightweight program, Sublime is an example of lightweight program, oh btw im not hating on vscode in my opinion its the greatest IDE
I worked 6 years in Visual Studio and Unity full time and yes VS Code FEELS lightweight, might not be but yeah, compared to big gigantic Visual Studio with it's 20GB downloads it's a dream.
@@rareschiuzbaian vim is not a standalone GUI app. Its a text editor that runs in a terminal. That’s why I didn’t compare Vim to an IDE. VSCode and regular IDEs are both standalone apps with a GUI. And in that scenario VSCode provides all IDE like features without the heavy load of an IDE or even other editors like Atom. I hope I could explain myself.
@Fashinqu A. Those are very advanced editors for people who have knowledge of scripting and linux in general and in no way falls under the choices for your normal beginners. For power users its fine. Even I am setting up my vim since the past few days and am planning to make a switch over in the near future. And I have mentioned other reasons for my comparison in another reply here.
Vs Code is lightweight until you start developing an angular monorepo and install the angular language Service. From then on, it turns your pc/Laptop into a heater
"Warp gives a fast and modern feeling that you can't say about a lot of terminals" Uhhh, how many terminals did you use? Even the terminal and command line subreddit and communities find warp pretty standart
@@humanfirst11 Like alacrity and sway for wayland compatible terminal in linux with grrat rendering and customization support, iterm2 for mac os with neat features, already great windows terminal and most of these being more properly open source compared to warp. The only thing i see about warp is those new grouped commands and tbh, this is really more like for non terminal users. I think kitty is a very good terminal but alacritty in linux is fast and simple enough for me. For terminals with some GUI elements the xfce terminal and especially terminator are really good, thankfully terminator supports plugins and also a great customization with tiling support. TL;DR You can't just say an open beta terminal with a very weird open source program gives better than most of the terminals that has support for both graphical rendering, vi like tools, amazing customization and plugin support which are also completely open source too. Oh also terminator supports windows without those annoying root and driver definitions with those ugly \'es for filesystems(with bash)
Calling VSCode lightweight is not really true. Compared to an IDE: sure. But VSCode is not an IDE it's a text editor with code highlighting/completion and a bunch of other features and compared to other text editors VSCode is not even close to being lightweight... And yes, I'm a vim (neovim) user...
@@punkerts7711 That's not what I meant. I've used VSCode for quite a few years before switching to vim (and later neovim). If you write code and want a lightweight *GUI* IDE, you can use VSCode though you have to install extensions to make it more IDE like because for itself it's just a text/code editor. If you don't want to use a microsoft product you can just use vscodium. It's technically still a microsoft product but the propriatary blobs have been removed...
I'd say notepad++ is far more lightweight. Less streamline bc you may have to search or create your own plugins but for C++ and c#, Lua, perl, etc it's ready to go
Me looking through all the VS code slander : Also me that's new to coding and planning om coming back to this comment section when i understand the slander : Edit : literally one year later and i understand
@@SpeaksYourWord welp because of South africas loadshedding problem not as much as i wabt But the gist was Git control Node and a lot of npms React(currently doing) Html css RestFull api stuff A few other things as well Soon im. Going to start Decentralized apps? I forgot the name something like Web3D But yeah Wish i could do more but atm I only get 8 hours worth of power through the day
😂 tf do u mean fast? Like opening? Bc since it’s not a light weight application it takes longer to first open up. If you think it compiles faster or something I am absolutely confused. Nothing wrong with using it, but the only way it might be faster than lighter weight editors is in your own speed (if you prefer it to other ides) and maybe if u need cloud computing.
I do almost all my programming in C++ so Visual Studio is my usual software of choice. Having everything build and be ready to debug quickly saves me a lot of time.
I can't stand "lightweight" editors anymore. Yeah they start up fast and there's an extension for everything, but most of the time, there's not one, but 300 extensions for the 1 thing you need and they all don't do exactly what you want or they do it worse than a specialized IDE.
"Visual Studio Code is lightweight." Surely 1.2GB RAM usage with a single 102 line file open, is idle (as in, no editing is happening), with only 9 extensions enabled!
This gets the same feel as when schools trying to get new studets. They dont know what thet are doing trying to appeal to the kids, so they google all the answers.
I have YOUR STUFF in a folder I call "Programming" I'm more of an Engineering type, I don't have a CLUE about programming, really. But hoping to begin practicing basics soon. (it's been YEARS since I was in school) But I'm using YOUR vids as a good & well-balanced source to help me get *oriented on the 'State of The Art'*
VSCode is like buying a bicycle then trying to turn into a rocket using bootleg parts from shady vendors and then watch it fall apart as it flies. It's quite satisfactory actually...