←back to thread

310 points skarat | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.202s | source

Things are changing so fast with these vscode forks I m barely able to keep up. Which one are you guys using currently? How does the autocomplete etc, compare between the two?
Show context
welder ◴[] No.43960527[source]
Neither? I'm surprised nobody has said it yet. I turned off AI autocomplete, and sometimes use the chat to debug or generate simple code but only when I prompt it to. Continuous autocomplete is just annoying and slows me down.
replies(27): >>43960550 #>>43960616 #>>43960839 #>>43960844 #>>43960845 #>>43960859 #>>43960860 #>>43960985 #>>43961007 #>>43961090 #>>43961128 #>>43961133 #>>43961220 #>>43961271 #>>43961282 #>>43961374 #>>43961436 #>>43961559 #>>43961887 #>>43962085 #>>43962163 #>>43962520 #>>43962714 #>>43962945 #>>43963070 #>>43963102 #>>43963459 #
imiric ◴[] No.43960839[source]
This is the way.

All this IDE churn makes me glad to have settled on Emacs a decade ago. I have adopted LLMs into my workflow via the excellent gptel, which stays out of my way but is there when I need it. I couldn't imagine switching to another editor because of some fancy LLM integration I have no control over. I have tried Cursor and VS Codium with extensions, and wasn't impressed. I'd rather use an "inferior" editor that's going to continue to work exactly how I want 50 years from now.

Emacs and Vim are editors for a lifetime. Very few software projects have that longevity and reliability. If a tool is instrumental to the work that you do, those features should be your highest priority. Not whether it works well with the latest tech trends.

replies(3): >>43961064 #>>43961518 #>>43962105 #
1. bandoti ◴[] No.43961518[source]
Emacs diff tools alone is a reason to use the editor. I switch between macOS, Linux, and Windows frequently so settled on Emacs and happy with that choice as well.