• 0x01@lemmy.ml
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      4 days ago

      Imo velocity and user experience aren’t mutually exclusive, as a developer I can respond to user requests way faster with web technologies.

      As a consumer vscode is a perfect example of why the ecosystem has value, are there other products that fill the same roles? Absolutely, but if you were around for the transition from bloodshed, codeblocks, eclipse and the like to sublime and vscode and other more modern editors you should remember how gamechanging the positive feedback loop of velocity achieved for the dev community in the form of user experience.

        • Fushuan [he/him]@lemm.ee
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          4 days ago

          With 0 extensions it absolutely doesn’t take 1GB and the more extensions you add it resembles more an IDE than a text editor, so the 1GB is completely justified. In fact, I have tons of extensions and mine takes around 300MB, I have like 5 instances open for work reasons (several remote connections) running on a VDI that gives me like 4 GB of RAM, and I can open excel, teams, and all the other company bullshit, alongside a browser with 20 tabs open. So no, it doesn’t take 1GB per instance.

        • 9point6@lemmy.world
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          4 days ago

          A modern text editor with language servers running absolutely will take up 1GB+, I know I can easily get neovim to go past that with typescript projects.

        • unique_hemp@discuss.tchncs.de
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          4 days ago

          I suspect most of the resource usage is LSP plugins, so equivalently configured neovim should be about the same, really. If you use VSCode as a plain text editor, it does not use that much RAM.