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In today's open source roundup: Microsoft offers .NET tool for Linux. Plus: SuperTuxKart gets a major upgrade. And play the Chocolate Doom game in Debian.
Microsoft's cross platform Visual Studio Code editor can now be installed via a snap package on Linux distributions which support it. The main benefits are built in dependencies and auto-updates.
That might be because running Visual Studio on Linux is basically impossible, at least according to multiple Developer Community users who posted comments like: As I see, bringing the old Visual ...
Installing Microsoft Visual Studio Code on Linux is a snap Written by Steven Vaughan-Nichols, Senior Contributing Editor April 5, 2019 at 7:28 a.m. PT Once upon a time Windows was Windows, Linux ...
At its Build developer conference, Microsoft today announced the launch of Visual Studio Code, a lightweight cross-platform code editor for writing modern web and cloud applications that will run ...
Visual Studio can now be used to remotely debug Linux applications using the GDB debugger. The Visual Studio Code editor that Microsoft released for Linux earlier this year was also open-sourced.
Visual Studio Code (VS Code), Microsoft's cross-platform text editor for developers, hit version 1.0 today after about a year in beta. The company says ...
In another gesture toward cross-platform tools, Microsoft has introduced Visual Studio Code, a code editor for building Web applications on Mac OS X, Linux, and Windows.
“Visual Studio Code is hugely popular, and it’s fantastic that we’re able to help it extend its reach into the Linux ecosystem,” Canonical engineering manager Evan Dandrea said in a statement.