![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() I am using bpython too, bpython is a fancy interface to the Python interpreter for Linux, BSD, OS X, and Windows (with some work). Before, I was using the native terminal/Python repl on my MacBook, but on demos and webinars for DevNet I found this was not the best visually. (Depending on your settings, it may be more handy to just highlight them and/or delete them by hand, at any time.) This plug-in provides just that, and a lot of options to fine-tune the way you want to decimate trailing spaces.įinally, one of the big reasons I moved to VSCode was the terminal. Having spent a few hours (OK days sometimes) troubleshooting/debugging code only to find out I had a space in the wrong place, has made me a fan of this feature.Īlong the same thread, VSCode provides a way to automate the deletion of trailing spaces by using the Trim Trailing Whitespace command. This extension colorizes the indentation in front of your text alternating four different colors on each step, it is helpful in writing code for Python. The next must-have for me was indent-rainbow. I went with “Material Theme” darker, it’s a quick install via the VScode Marketplace. (When your Twitter name is having a dark mode on everything and dark theming is … well, it just fits. Setting up my VSCodeįirst things first, I wanted a dark theme. I was a newbie, and some great insight and sharing was done between us on how we each set up our VScode environments. Others in the chat had done this way before me. (Funny enough we all tried Sublime Text first, then Atom both of these are great editors and personally I ran some good mileage on both.) As fate would have it, we discovered all of us had moved to VScode. The general consensus in our chat was that we had all moved on to a source-code editor. ![]() Bottom line, you always need to know VIM (or Nano), even the very basics. We still would use it for quick fixes and edit’s, or when we had logged into a remote machine/device and no source-code editor s installed. We all started on a similar path with VIM, and it is a great tool! VIM allows you to be efficient by forcing you to only use the keyboard, but we discovered that all of us had moved away from VIM. A few weeks back a few folks in the NetDevOps Live! Webex Teams Room were talking about source-code editors - how we got started, what text editing tool we started with, what we are using today - with a little of the why we use these (spoiler alert, its mostly personal preference). ![]()
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