I like to keep VS Code lightweight as much as possible, therefore I don't have that many extensions - only the ones that are really cannot live without.
The more extensions you have, the more memory it will consume, the more time to boot up vs code.
I should also add that my main editor is not visual studio code but Webstorm. I mainly use VS Code for small edits on some JSON or small JavaScript files. Sometimes I may also use VS Code for starting up small side projects, when I want to try something new or some ideas from a blog post I just read.
I love VS Code and I like to keep it ready for hacking. 😊
- ESLint - This one integrates ESLint into VS Code.
-
EditorConfig for VS Code - Adds support for
.editorconfig
files. -
EditorConfigGenerator - I am lazy enough I can't open a new tab and search for a good default
.editorconfig
so I use this extension to generate the defaults for me. -
markdownlint - As I'm usually editting a lot of
.md
files, this extension informs me about lint errors. - npm - Adds some nice npm scripts options to the command pallete.
- npm Intellisense - Adds intellisense on import statements.
- Prettier - Code formatter - I really like prettier defaults.
- Vetur - Vue tools for VS Code. Most of the time I'm working with Vue, this extension adds a lot of useful snippets as well as syntax highlighting.
- GitLens - Git supercharged - Helps to visualize code changes.
And that's it! This is the minimum I need to make VS Code work just as I want for my needs. I used to have a lot more, I even lost track of them, until VS became so slow, I had to revise all of them, removing all the non essential ones.
What are the VS Code extensions you can't live without?
Thanks for reading 👋
Photo by John Barkiple on Unsplash
Top comments (1)
I found one really cool vscode theme named Jellyfish-x-retro 🚀🚀