

Visual Studio Code supports full syntax coloring and highlighting, bracket matching and linting, plus keyboard bindings and snippets.

It’s these folks that Microsoft is pitching Visual Studio Code for Linux at. It is not a fully fledged IDE (Integrated Development Environment) like its namesake Visual Studio.īut that’s the point a score of OMG! Ubuntu! readers already use regular code editors, like Sublime Text and GitHub’s Atom to make or edit apps and websites. The tool is a code editor first and foremost. Visual Studio Code has been been built using a mix of web-based and open-source technologies, like Chromium and GitHub’s Electron app framework, and Microsoft’s own Monaco editor. In this post we’ll take a quick look at what it is and how you can install it in Ubuntu. (If you didn’t know then I apologise for making you spray coffee all over your laptop.) A fair chunk of you will know that Microsoft - no hissing at the back - has released a cross-platform code editor that runs on Linux (as well as Mac OS X and Windows).Īnnounced at the Build 2015 event, Microsoft has launched a desktop code editing application on Linux called Visual Studio Code.
