There’s the base vs code source code, which microsoft takes, adds a bunch of tracking, compiles it, and distributes that binary. If you compiled vs code yourself from source, you would not get the same executable.
A bit like chrome, because i’m pretty sure chrome isn’t open source, chromium is. Could be wrong on that.
It should be VIM
No one comes back from VIM.
Those who say they have are dirty liars… or have it paused in the background.
…or eventually convert to the cult of Emacs.
When I use Emacs, it’s with Evil.
I use emacs as my lemmy client
Pfff. Try joe editor, then. It’s a Wordstar clone. For those of us that loved Wordstar, it’s as much as a home to us as vi/vim is.
I successfully moved to NeoVim
Layers upon layers of vimception!
i always end up just going back to vscodium.
liked Helix quite a lot more but still switched back after a while
@vox @Kinglink why not vscode?
… because official vscode binaries are proprietary and include tracking components
@vox really!! I thought that vscode open source
There’s the base vs code source code, which microsoft takes, adds a bunch of tracking, compiles it, and distributes that binary. If you compiled vs code yourself from source, you would not get the same executable.
A bit like chrome, because i’m pretty sure chrome isn’t open source, chromium is. Could be wrong on that.
yes, but vscode’s source code is still released under an open-source license. (that’s what vscodium and code-oss are built from)