Visual Studio vs. Sublime Text | visual studio code vs sublime text
You’llalreadybefamiliarwithatexteditorifyou’vetakenanyCodecademycourses[1].BelowistheCodecademytexteditorinfullscreenattheendofthefirstmoduleoftheHTMLcourse[2].WhileCodecademy’slearningenvironmentprovidesanintuitiveanduser-friendingcodingexperience,sometimesyou’llneedtouseyourowntexteditor.Forexample,ifyoudecidetoattendaMeetuporin-personcodingcourse,theywilluseadownloadabletexteditor,andyou’llneedtoinstallthistoworkonprojectsbothinclassandathome.I’vedabbledwithafewtexteditorstogetabetterfeel...
You’ll already be familiar with a text editor if you’ve taken any Codecademy courses[1]. Below is the Codecademy text editor in full screen at the end of the first module of the HTML course[2].
While Codecademy’s learning environment provides an intuitive and user-friending coding experience, sometimes you’ll need to use your own text editor. For example, if you decide to attend a Meetup or in-person coding course, they will use a downloadable text editor, and you’ll need to install this to work on projects both in class and at home.
I’ve dabbled with a few text editors to get a better feel for what suits my needs best. This is crucial as there is no “best” text editor out there, only the one that you allows you to create your best work.
In this article, Ill provide an in-depth comparison of two of the most popular text editors: Visual Studio and Sublime Text.
Visual StudioVisual Studio (the text editor is known as Visual Studi...