Visual Studio Code: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
mNo edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{cleanup|REWRITE WITH VALVE TERMINOLOGY. P.S.: Its not regular WIKIPEDIA, its VDC!}} | |||
{{Stub}}[[File:vscode-logo.png|right|450px|Visual Studio Code's logo]] | {{Stub}}[[File:vscode-logo.png|right|450px|Visual Studio Code's logo]] | ||
{{for|Setting up VSCode for Vscript|[[Visual Studio Code/Setting up Visual Studio for Vscript|Setting up Visual Studio for Vscript]]}} | {{for|Setting up VSCode for Vscript|[[Visual Studio Code/Setting up Visual Studio for Vscript|Setting up Visual Studio for Vscript]]}} |
Revision as of 22:31, 26 January 2024

This article or section needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality because:
REWRITE WITH VALVE TERMINOLOGY. P.S.: Its not regular WIKIPEDIA, its VDC!
For help, see the VDC Editing Help and Wikipedia cleanup process. Also, remember to check for any notes left by the tagger at this article's talk page.For Setting up VSCode for Vscript, see Setting up Visual Studio for Vscript.
Visual Studio Code (also known shorthand as VSCode) is an
Integrated development environment (IDE) developed and maintained by Template:Microsoft. It boasts of built in syntax highlighting, workspaces,
Windows Powershell integration, themes, easy-to-install extensions, IntelliSense, debugging, and ability to preview most webpage and image extensions. Being one of the most popular code editors, Visual Studio has been in development for almost 10 years, and is Open Source on Github.
Uses with Valve's works
VS Code's extension marketplace has many extensions catered to Source Engine specific files. VS Code can edit any text-based Source Engine file, including VMT, VDF, QC, Vscript, and VMF files.