![]() We also switched from SQL Server to Postgresql. It took several months to complete the transition in steps, but we’re almost there. You’re thinking that you could never give up the luxury of Visual Studio. You could never survive without the convenience of Intellisense and autocomplete. Your life would be meaningless without your precious breakpoints and line-by-line debugging. You would shrivel up into a dry empty husk in the absence of ReSharper’s loving embrace. I gotta be honest here, I do most of my git stuff straight in Iterm. However, VSCode has an incredibly nice Git Diff split screen. To get that level of git integration, check out this plugin: tpope/vim-fugitive. Additional plugins that you may want This is some of the stuff I used in Visual Studio Code, that I wanted to bring into Vim. I miss vim's behavior! The problem here is that Intellisense integration requires behaving in the same way as the original Visual Studio editor - the behavior was already emulated, but it broke Intellisense! In vim, when you enter replace mode with 'R', backspace restores the last overwritten character. Life with C# on Linux isn’t all that bad. ![]() ![]() You can still have many of the things you love about Visual Studio, without all of the bloat. The purpose of this article is to explain how I’ve achieved some of that for myself. ![]()
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