Hi, I would like to write the following article:
Summary: Install Visual Studio Code in Fedora Description: This article is aimed to tell viewers about a powerful source code editor i.e. Visual Studio Code and can they install it in their system. After this the article will also guide you through certain steps that the viewers can follow after the installation. The general blueprint is as follow: • What is Visual Studio Code? And its Advantages • How to install Visual Studio Code • After installation – Some useful commands • Installing Packages • Themes
If you like the idea then please let me know.
Cheers,
On Tue, Oct 03, 2017 at 11:57:25PM +0530, Jogender Kvs wrote:
Hi, I would like to write the following article:
Summary: Install Visual Studio Code in Fedora Description: This article is aimed to tell viewers about a powerful source code editor i.e. Visual Studio Code and can they install it in their system. After this the article will also guide you through certain steps that the viewers can follow after the installation. The general blueprint is as follow: • What is Visual Studio Code? And its Advantages • How to install Visual Studio Code • After installation – Some useful commands • Installing Packages • Themes
If you like the idea then please let me know.
Hearty +1 on this idea. A couple ideas:
* In talking about VSCode and advantages, definitely explain its open source nature. (Does it have a community of non-MS contributors? etc.)
* How does it compare to using something like Atom or even standard Vim/Emacs?
Hello all,
On Thu, Oct 5, 2017 at 12:17 AM, Paul W. Frields stickster@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Oct 03, 2017 at 11:57:25PM +0530, Jogender Kvs wrote:
Hi, I would like to write the following article:
Summary: Install Visual Studio Code in Fedora Description: This article is aimed to tell viewers about a powerful
source
code editor i.e. Visual Studio Code and can they install it in their system. After this the article will also guide you through certain steps that the viewers can follow after the installation. The general blueprint is as follow: • What is Visual Studio Code? And its Advantages • How to install Visual Studio Code • After installation – Some useful commands • Installing Packages • Themes
If you like the idea then please let me know.
Hearty +1 on this idea. A couple ideas:
In talking about VSCode and advantages, definitely explain its open source nature. (Does it have a community of non-MS contributors? etc.)
How does it compare to using something like Atom or even standard Vim/Emacs?
@Paul, thanks a lot for the suggestions, I have worked on the same. I have explained the open source nature of the editor, and am not sure if there is a community of non-MS contributors, but there are surely other non-MS developers contributing to the same.
I have added my pitch here[1] and am yet to add the comparative study of the editors, to hero VSCode :)
[1] https://fedoramagazine.org/wp-admin/post.php?post=19105&action=edit
Thanking you, Jogender Kota.
On Fri, Oct 20, 2017 at 12:53:50AM +0530, Jogender Kvs wrote:
Hello all,
On Thu, Oct 5, 2017 at 12:17 AM, Paul W. Frields stickster@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Oct 03, 2017 at 11:57:25PM +0530, Jogender Kvs wrote:
Hi, I would like to write the following article:
Summary: Install Visual Studio Code in Fedora Description: This article is aimed to tell viewers about a powerful
source
code editor i.e. Visual Studio Code and can they install it in their system. After this the article will also guide you through certain steps that the viewers can follow after the installation. The general blueprint is as follow: • What is Visual Studio Code? And its Advantages • How to install Visual Studio Code • After installation – Some useful commands • Installing Packages • Themes
If you like the idea then please let me know.
Hearty +1 on this idea. A couple ideas:
In talking about VSCode and advantages, definitely explain its open source nature. (Does it have a community of non-MS contributors? etc.)
How does it compare to using something like Atom or even standard Vim/Emacs?
@Paul, thanks a lot for the suggestions, I have worked on the same. I have explained the open source nature of the editor, and am not sure if there is a community of non-MS contributors, but there are surely other non-MS developers contributing to the same.
I have added my pitch here[1] and am yet to add the comparative study of the editors, to hero VSCode :)
[1] https://fedoramagazine.org/wp-admin/post.php?post=19105&action=edit
Hi Jogender,
I quite like this article. Here are some tips for you to try in tuning up the draft a bit:
* Try to eliminate "we" or "I" in articles. Instead, just give simple command-style instructions where needed, like "Type the following command."
* Describe a bit more beyond the simple file and theme functions. Can you show the debugger and the git integration a little more fully?
Thanks and we look forward to reading your revisions!
Hey all,
On Fri, Oct 20, 2017 at 10:05 PM, Paul W. Frields stickster@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, Oct 20, 2017 at 12:53:50AM +0530, Jogender Kvs wrote:
Hello all,
On Thu, Oct 5, 2017 at 12:17 AM, Paul W. Frields stickster@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Oct 03, 2017 at 11:57:25PM +0530, Jogender Kvs wrote:
Hi, I would like to write the following article:
Summary: Install Visual Studio Code in Fedora Description: This article is aimed to tell viewers about a powerful
source
code editor i.e. Visual Studio Code and can they install it in their system. After this the article will also guide you through certain
steps
that the viewers can follow after the installation. The general
blueprint
is as follow: • What is Visual Studio Code? And its Advantages • How to install Visual Studio Code • After installation – Some useful commands • Installing Packages • Themes
If you like the idea then please let me know.
Hearty +1 on this idea. A couple ideas:
In talking about VSCode and advantages, definitely explain its open source nature. (Does it have a community of non-MS contributors? etc.)
How does it compare to using something like Atom or even standard Vim/Emacs?
@Paul, thanks a lot for the suggestions, I have worked on the same. I have explained the open source nature of the editor, and am not sure if there is a community of non-MS contributors, but there are surely other non-MS developers contributing to the same.
I have added my pitch here[1] and am yet to add the comparative study of the editors, to hero VSCode :)
[1] https://fedoramagazine.org/wp-admin/post.php?post=19105&action=edit
Hi Jogender,
I quite like this article. Here are some tips for you to try in tuning up the draft a bit:
Try to eliminate "we" or "I" in articles. Instead, just give simple command-style instructions where needed, like "Type the following command."
Describe a bit more beyond the simple file and theme functions. Can you show the debugger and the git integration a little more fully?
Thanks and we look forward to reading your revisions!
@Paul, I have worked on the suggested changes. Please review the same. Thanks again for your time.
Thanking you, Jogender Kota.
On Sun, Oct 29, 2017 at 11:48:28PM +0530, Jogender Kvs wrote:
Hey all,
On Fri, Oct 20, 2017 at 10:05 PM, Paul W. Frields stickster@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Jogender,
I quite like this article. Here are some tips for you to try in tuning up the draft a bit:
Try to eliminate "we" or "I" in articles. Instead, just give simple command-style instructions where needed, like "Type the following command."
Describe a bit more beyond the simple file and theme functions. Can you show the debugger and the git integration a little more fully?
Thanks and we look forward to reading your revisions!
@Paul, I have worked on the suggested changes. Please review the same. Thanks again for your time.
It looks improved to me. We'll do some further tuning and we plan to publish within the next week or two, depending on F27 release date, since there are some required articles to push out in that time.
magazine@lists.fedoraproject.org