![]() To close, VSCode has improved a lot since it was “just the Sublime Text from MS.” It has accelerated its improvement lately and there is no reason I think it won’t continue to get better since MS keeps throwing money at it and everyone and their mom have an extension these days. We’ve significantly optimized RubyMine’s performance and memory consumption: RubyMine’s code completion speed was almost doubled. Then comes Copilot, while far from perfect, is surprisingly helpful. ![]() I place different settings files on each repo and forget about it. ![]() I did not really compare with VSCode however. The experience overall has been positive. WebStorm is developed in Java, which generally feels slower than VS Code. Introducing Microsoft Visual Studio Code, released in 2015, VSCode is a lightweight text editor powered by Microsoft's Monaco editor. VS Code is based on Electron and is powered by HTML & JavaScript. It has everything you need, including outstanding autocomplete support. VSCode allows for workflows that span those three stacks with a solid debugger, breakpoints, code bookmarks, clients for my AWS and Docker remotes, as well as APIs-no need to spin up and down different IDEs for different work. Personally I’m quite happy with Jetbrains IntelliJ IDEA’ Ruby plugin ( same experience as when buying RubyMine directly, I just use IntelliJ for historical reasons as I come from Java development). Our team primarily uses RubyMine, the JetBrains Ruby IDE for Ruby and Ruby on Rails development. I did not use Rubymine long enough to assert that VSCode is better, but my second and third stacks are JavaScript (Typescript, Lambda, and React) and Java. What problems is RubyMine solving and how is that benefiting you It provides smart coding assistance, intelligent code refactoring and code analysis capabilities which is super helpful while managing large codebases. My stack is primarily RoR, and after several years of byebug and pry, I started using the VSCode debugger it feels like a game changer. Will prefer vscode instead of this for small-size applications Review collected by and hosted on G2.com. I’ve been using VSCode for several years now. ![]()
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