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  3. the VS in VS Code stands for Vibed and Shitty

the VS in VS Code stands for Vibed and Shitty

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  • 401matthall@mastodon.xyz4 401matthall@mastodon.xyz

    @davidgerard

    Ooof, I'm gonna step into the line-of-fire here... I still use it and _in general_ I like it.

    I cannot `vim` I have tried and the cognitive overhead is _too_ high. I can `nano` but I like the fuzzy-search options I get with vscode.

    You can hate me, I get it but I've only got so much bandwidth to learn a new thing and do enough work to not get fired when everyone else is spitting out twenty-five hundred lines a day via LLMs.

    401matthall@mastodon.xyz4 This user is from outside of this forum
    401matthall@mastodon.xyz4 This user is from outside of this forum
    401matthall@mastodon.xyz
    wrote last edited by
    #6

    @davidgerard

    So... Having said all that... What else is there that meets _my_ needs and isn't just your favorite editor?

    davidgerard@circumstances.runD 1 Reply Last reply
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    • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

      the VS in VS Code stands for Vibed and Shitty

      of course it's fucking vibe coded, how could anyone have ever thought otherwise

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      Visual Studio Code (@vscode.dev)

      The VS Code team builds with VS Code - this is a fundamental principle of how the team works, and it extends to AI capabilities too. Learn more about how the team builds with AI, including how these processes have helped the team move from monthly to weekly releases: https://aka.ms/VSCode/BuildsWithAI

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      mikalai@privacysafe.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
      mikalai@privacysafe.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
      mikalai@privacysafe.social
      wrote last edited by
      #7

      @davidgerard
      Folks. Keep copies of previous versions, in case new one becomes too ... bad.
      Download. Don't autoupdate. Or, have some snapshotting of your environment with tools.

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • 401matthall@mastodon.xyz4 401matthall@mastodon.xyz

        @davidgerard

        So... Having said all that... What else is there that meets _my_ needs and isn't just your favorite editor?

        davidgerard@circumstances.runD This user is from outside of this forum
        davidgerard@circumstances.runD This user is from outside of this forum
        davidgerard@circumstances.run
        wrote last edited by
        #8

        @401matthall cat|cc and get it right the first time

        it's entirely unclear to me why you respond to "x editor is vibe coded" with "well what should I use *huh*??", it seems a bizarrely nonsequitur response

        zzt@mas.toZ 1 Reply Last reply
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        • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

          @401matthall cat|cc and get it right the first time

          it's entirely unclear to me why you respond to "x editor is vibe coded" with "well what should I use *huh*??", it seems a bizarrely nonsequitur response

          zzt@mas.toZ This user is from outside of this forum
          zzt@mas.toZ This user is from outside of this forum
          zzt@mas.to
          wrote last edited by
          #9

          @davidgerard @401matthall maslow’s hierarchy of needs but every level is TECO, the programmable editor that even its fans don’t like

          I’m certain you can do 25,000 lines of code daily or whatever in TECO but neither you nor the code will survive

          TECO was the original implementation language for emacs and all future implementations except one considered it damage that must be routed around

          TECO: nobody’s favorite editor ™️

          zzt@mas.toZ 1 Reply Last reply
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          • zzt@mas.toZ zzt@mas.to

            @davidgerard @401matthall maslow’s hierarchy of needs but every level is TECO, the programmable editor that even its fans don’t like

            I’m certain you can do 25,000 lines of code daily or whatever in TECO but neither you nor the code will survive

            TECO was the original implementation language for emacs and all future implementations except one considered it damage that must be routed around

            TECO: nobody’s favorite editor ™️

            zzt@mas.toZ This user is from outside of this forum
            zzt@mas.toZ This user is from outside of this forum
            zzt@mas.to
            wrote last edited by
            #10

            @davidgerard @401matthall TECO is such a good language that most of the common control structures are single unprintable characters, like $ (the escape key, yes you insert escape to terminate commands, if you use dollar sign instead it breaks) and ^R (control-R). oh you can’t figure out how to insert these characters into text files? well guess what editor lets you do that

            TECO: it lets you do anything! you’ll fucking hate it!

            aaron@chirp.zadzmo.orgA zzt@mas.toZ 2 Replies Last reply
            0
            • zzt@mas.toZ zzt@mas.to

              @davidgerard @401matthall TECO is such a good language that most of the common control structures are single unprintable characters, like $ (the escape key, yes you insert escape to terminate commands, if you use dollar sign instead it breaks) and ^R (control-R). oh you can’t figure out how to insert these characters into text files? well guess what editor lets you do that

              TECO: it lets you do anything! you’ll fucking hate it!

              aaron@chirp.zadzmo.orgA This user is from outside of this forum
              aaron@chirp.zadzmo.orgA This user is from outside of this forum
              aaron@chirp.zadzmo.org
              wrote last edited by
              #11

              @zzt This description of TECO makes me really glad I never learned vi beyond the most basic, common-to-all implementation features.

              I know how to quit, save, move the cursor, and switch between edit and command, and... that's about it.

              HP-UX 8? Redhat Enterprise 9? NetBSD 1.4.3 through 11? Alpine 3.22? Solaris 8 or 10? AIX 5L? Debian Buster? Irix 6.4? I type "vi $file", and it's all the same.

              I have achieved immunity to change by pure obsolescence alone.
              @davidgerard @401matthall

              zzt@mas.toZ 1 Reply Last reply
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              • zzt@mas.toZ zzt@mas.to

                @davidgerard @401matthall TECO is such a good language that most of the common control structures are single unprintable characters, like $ (the escape key, yes you insert escape to terminate commands, if you use dollar sign instead it breaks) and ^R (control-R). oh you can’t figure out how to insert these characters into text files? well guess what editor lets you do that

                TECO: it lets you do anything! you’ll fucking hate it!

                zzt@mas.toZ This user is from outside of this forum
                zzt@mas.toZ This user is from outside of this forum
                zzt@mas.to
                wrote last edited by
                #12

                @davidgerard @401matthall TECO! how does it look? I swear to fuck it looks like

                EBhello.c$$P$$SHello$0TT$$-5DIGoodbye$0TT$$EX$$

                (example stolen from Wikipedia because I’m taking far too much of a dump to log into my TOPS-20 account where the horrors live)

                and again $ is where you mash the escape key if editing live or insert escape into your script otherwise. this shit opens a file named hello.c and replaces Hello with Goodbye??? supposedly????

                you’re gonna fucking hate TECO, as requested

                zzt@mas.toZ 1 Reply Last reply
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                • zzt@mas.toZ zzt@mas.to

                  @davidgerard @401matthall TECO! how does it look? I swear to fuck it looks like

                  EBhello.c$$P$$SHello$0TT$$-5DIGoodbye$0TT$$EX$$

                  (example stolen from Wikipedia because I’m taking far too much of a dump to log into my TOPS-20 account where the horrors live)

                  and again $ is where you mash the escape key if editing live or insert escape into your script otherwise. this shit opens a file named hello.c and replaces Hello with Goodbye??? supposedly????

                  you’re gonna fucking hate TECO, as requested

                  zzt@mas.toZ This user is from outside of this forum
                  zzt@mas.toZ This user is from outside of this forum
                  zzt@mas.to
                  wrote last edited by
                  #13

                  @davidgerard @401matthall P$$S Hello$, I scream at my computer, taking myself extremely seriously as a programmer

                  piss hello indeed, it replies back

                  zzt@mas.toZ 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • aaron@chirp.zadzmo.orgA aaron@chirp.zadzmo.org

                    @zzt This description of TECO makes me really glad I never learned vi beyond the most basic, common-to-all implementation features.

                    I know how to quit, save, move the cursor, and switch between edit and command, and... that's about it.

                    HP-UX 8? Redhat Enterprise 9? NetBSD 1.4.3 through 11? Alpine 3.22? Solaris 8 or 10? AIX 5L? Debian Buster? Irix 6.4? I type "vi $file", and it's all the same.

                    I have achieved immunity to change by pure obsolescence alone.
                    @davidgerard @401matthall

                    zzt@mas.toZ This user is from outside of this forum
                    zzt@mas.toZ This user is from outside of this forum
                    zzt@mas.to
                    wrote last edited by
                    #14

                    @aaron @davidgerard @401matthall the most telling thing about TECO is that when the emacs community needed a set of modal editing commands they went to great expense to write an ecosystem of vim emulators and supporting code in lisp rather than ever touch TECO again

                    the only TECO in elisp implementation I know of is a joke implementation from like 6 years ago

                    1 Reply Last reply
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                    • zzt@mas.toZ zzt@mas.to

                      @davidgerard @401matthall P$$S Hello$, I scream at my computer, taking myself extremely seriously as a programmer

                      piss hello indeed, it replies back

                      zzt@mas.toZ This user is from outside of this forum
                      zzt@mas.toZ This user is from outside of this forum
                      zzt@mas.to
                      wrote last edited by
                      #15

                      @davidgerard @401matthall I love TECO, it’s so bad, I say, pulling on my TECO glove

                      feel free to use the rest of this thread to post about editors that meet _his_ needs (TECO is Turing complete, of course it’s Turing complete, it’s much more painful if it’s Turing complete) but are absolutely not your favorite. just the most dreadful, so bad it’s good shit that’s ever edited text (or punched paper tape, TECO doesn’t care)

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

                        the VS in VS Code stands for Vibed and Shitty

                        of course it's fucking vibe coded, how could anyone have ever thought otherwise

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                        Visual Studio Code (@vscode.dev)

                        The VS Code team builds with VS Code - this is a fundamental principle of how the team works, and it extends to AI capabilities too. Learn more about how the team builds with AI, including how these processes have helped the team move from monthly to weekly releases: https://aka.ms/VSCode/BuildsWithAI

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                        citrusui@mastodon.social
                        wrote last edited by
                        #16

                        @davidgerard weekly releases 🫩 (as a system admin i dislike more software having more updates)

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                        • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

                          the VS in VS Code stands for Vibed and Shitty

                          of course it's fucking vibe coded, how could anyone have ever thought otherwise

                          Link Preview Image
                          Visual Studio Code (@vscode.dev)

                          The VS Code team builds with VS Code - this is a fundamental principle of how the team works, and it extends to AI capabilities too. Learn more about how the team builds with AI, including how these processes have helped the team move from monthly to weekly releases: https://aka.ms/VSCode/BuildsWithAI

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                          david_chisnall@infosec.exchange
                          wrote last edited by
                          #17

                          @davidgerard

                          The absolute security disaster that is the remote mode of VS Code (which shipped before Copilot was available even internally) we makes me wonder if this might be a project that LLM slop can’t make any worse.

                          whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

                            @davidgerard

                            The absolute security disaster that is the remote mode of VS Code (which shipped before Copilot was available even internally) we makes me wonder if this might be a project that LLM slop can’t make any worse.

                            whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW This user is from outside of this forum
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                            whitequark@social.treehouse.systems
                            wrote last edited by
                            #18

                            @david_chisnall @davidgerard no, it's definitely worse now. I switched to it from Sublime Text (after many years of paying for the latter) because VSCode had an actually sensible extension model, especially for language servers and debuggers, and ST never did. unfortunately it's reached a point where I'll have to switch to something else—for which I currently have no alternative because I rely on the "Live Share" extension nobody else has bothered implementing (in a better way or otherwise)

                            david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

                              the VS in VS Code stands for Vibed and Shitty

                              of course it's fucking vibe coded, how could anyone have ever thought otherwise

                              Link Preview Image
                              Visual Studio Code (@vscode.dev)

                              The VS Code team builds with VS Code - this is a fundamental principle of how the team works, and it extends to AI capabilities too. Learn more about how the team builds with AI, including how these processes have helped the team move from monthly to weekly releases: https://aka.ms/VSCode/BuildsWithAI

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                              arclight@oldbytes.space
                              wrote last edited by
                              #19

                              @davidgerard I saw the change in release schedule from monthly to weekly and I cannot believe anyone can do substantial quality code review on a code of that size in a week.

                              I do not believe they know what they are shipping nor do I believe they see this as a problem.

                              Aside from critical bug fixes, why should I need to update my editor more than quarterly or annually? It's just gratuitous risk and churn.

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                              • whitequark@social.treehouse.systemsW whitequark@social.treehouse.systems

                                @david_chisnall @davidgerard no, it's definitely worse now. I switched to it from Sublime Text (after many years of paying for the latter) because VSCode had an actually sensible extension model, especially for language servers and debuggers, and ST never did. unfortunately it's reached a point where I'll have to switch to something else—for which I currently have no alternative because I rely on the "Live Share" extension nobody else has bothered implementing (in a better way or otherwise)

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                                david_chisnall@infosec.exchange
                                wrote last edited by
                                #20

                                @whitequark @davidgerard

                                I was never a fan of the VS Code extension model because it had absolutely no security model at all. This made it trivial for malware to infest the extension-store ecosystem. It was to text editors what ActiveX was to web browsers.

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