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- February 2017 (version 1. 10) - Visual Studio Code
Welcome to the February 2017 release of Visual Studio Code There are a number of significant updates in this version that we hope you will like, some of the key highlights include:
- Introducing Visual Studio Live Share
We are excited to announce that we’re working on "Visual Studio Live Share", which enables developers using Visual Studio 2017 or Visual Studio Code to collaborate in real-time!
- Download Visual Studio Code - Mac, Linux, Windows
Visual Studio Code is free and available on your favorite platform - Linux, macOS, and Windows Download Visual Studio Code to experience a redefined code editor, optimized for building and debugging modern web and cloud applications
- October 2017 (version 1. 18) - Visual Studio Code
Welcome to the October 2017 release of Visual Studio Code There are a number of significant updates in this release and we completed several popular outstanding feature requests
- August 2017 (version 1. 16) - Visual Studio Code
Welcome to the August 2017 release of Visual Studio Code There are a number of significant updates in this version that we hope you will like, some of the key highlights include:
- Optimizations in Syntax Highlighting - Visual Studio Code
Tokenization in VS Code (and in the Monaco Editor) runs line-by-line, from top to bottom, in a single pass A tokenizer can store some state at the end of a tokenized line, which will be passed back when tokenizing the next line
- April 2017 (version 1. 12) - Visual Studio Code
Welcome to the April 2017 release of Visual Studio Code For this iteration, we shifted from our usual focus on new features to improving our processes and code base
- Emmet 2. 0 in Visual Studio Code
Read on to learn about the Emmet 2 0 changes in Visual Studio Code Previously, the Emmet library was a single monolithic codebase that was used for every Emmet action The author of Emmet, Sergey Chikuyonok, envisioned a new world for Emmet 2 0 with smaller, re-usable modules
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