#VSCode is NOT Visual Studio... And my #PineTime @PINE64 tutorials are Fully FOSS-Friendly... Here's why... https://gist.github.com/lupyuen/08e383845d68d3337747e8eb59d0f624
To me this is a perfect example of a monopolistic corporation using OSS improve its image, attract the community to do free work and marketing for them, while keeping key components of the system(in areas where they have and wish to maintain their monopoly, which for MS very much is C# and C++ dev tooling) proprietary. VSCodium supports VSCode, unless it actually forks and does sizeable amount work under a GPL like license.
Also it being based on the abomination that is electron, I just can't see how someone doing embedded dev or even just rust in general can like it, even purely on the technical level. Your only excuse is "I like shiny, and I don't care"... which is a valid excuse I guess.
@freemo @namark @PINE64 OK maybe let's bring the discussion back from Microsoft back to VSCode (or whatever *Code that we can choose to name it)... Had a quick discussion with the Awesome #PineTime Community...
We would like to have a GUI tool (in addition to the existing command-line tool) because it's a matter of Choice and Inclusiveness. Some folks may find GUI IDEs more comfortable (probably younger+older coders). Also I suspect that Asians prefer a GUI IDE that's culturally agnostic. (Easier to communicate too. Any other Asians here who can validate this?)
Is it going to be based on VSCode or Electron or whatever? Not sure yet. But seems the VSCode Community has done such a great job, we should consider them.
Erm maybe I get a tad offended when people say I should use the command line and GUIs rot my brain... But my brain really works better with GUI.
And since command line tools like gdb are extremely well documented, I thought I might chip in a viable FOSS GUI alternative. Remember that All Monopolies Are Bad... Even Command-Line Monopolies 😉
So my plea to all Command-Line Fans... Please cut us GUI Folks some slack... Let's all solve problems with the tools that work best for each of us. Thanks! 🙏
@freemo @namark @PINE64 OK glad that I can still go ahead with my GUIs and you won't look down on me ;-) Now since I'm on a STEM server, lemme give you another reason why GUIs have a purpose...
Hypothetically... If I grew up playing video games, I would find GUIs more appealing than command-line interfaces right?
So if we didn't have a good GUI to captivate me, I wouldn't have bothered to learn about computers and how they work.
And because I never learnt any computing, I wouldn't have learnt any programming either... The ultimate command-line interface.
So for the sake of STEM I think we should invest in FOSS GUI development tools. Because kids will never touch computers otherwise.
I don't believe GUI tools will rot their brains because GUI tools can only do so much... It's only a matter of time that they will break out of the GUI and do something textual.
I'm very concerned about the lack of young coders in Singapore... I have a hunch that we are not creating the right GUI coding tools to captivate them.
Microsoft Visual Studio is an awful terrible legacy mess. Scratch is too kiddy. What's in between?
Maybe I'll solve this with the #PineTime Community. I'll keep you updated if we're successful :-)
Hey I never said we should abolish GUIs or they dont have a purpose. I often say they have a place in helping entry level programmers get interested. Hell if you find it useful as a professional programmer feel free to use it too.
I'm just saying there is good reason for someone to cringe when they see something like VSCode, but if they are giving you a hard time for YOUR choice then they are in the wrong.
So yea I agree, let people keep investing in FOSS GUI tools. Just dont be surprised when I cringe if I see someone using one in a professional setting (teaching would be a good exception).
I am actually concerned more with **too many** young coders. I find in the USA (where I moved from) there are far too many of them, mostly motivated by money. The quality has really went down in the work place and its hard to find quality co-workers or employees, largely because too many people are going into programming who arent passionate about it.
I was not arguing command line vs GUI. If you want to contribute to free software you should prefer projects like emacs(it has a gui and mouse support of sorts), gnome builder, code blocks, bluefish etc.
If localization is what you are missing, than contribute to it. Though I would say that is not at all an IDE problem, there is way more important stuff (mainly learning materials) that are tied to English, random menu items of some GUI are the least of the concerns in that area.
Also I'm not sure what kind of worldview(softview?) you must have to call gdb(which is not even a company and not even a brand) a monopoly, but I'm pretty sure it makes everything I said complete nonsense to you. I encourage you to familiarize yourself with free software movement. I don't have any good pointers, but maybe fsf.org, or libreplanet.org are good places to start.
@lupyuen
I think you should use whatever you enjoy using. I dont like to rely too much on my mouse it slows me down and obscures me from the internals and limits my ability to be productive when I read the limits of that GUI.
I find the argument for using a GUI is only one, a smaller learning curve. You can open it up and start working, no need to memorize key bindings or commands or look at man pages.
While there is nothing wrong with that I do find that when we talk about the whole of a community (not the individuals which can always deviate from the norm) this has consequences. When I deal with other GUI users (windows users who are programmers) I often find they have far less skill than command line users. I cant tell you how many times I said to a windows user "Can you please rebase your commit and squash and reorganize your commits" and they had No idea what I was saying, all they ever knew how to do was hit a few buttons, even though this should be the norm for most commits.
My aversion to the GUI world is mostly just that, that I find the communities that build up around them seem to be poorly skilled.
Now to bring that back to VS code, well that point was really just one of the points I listed. The microsoft association and how they used microsoft idology to make that GUI made the consequences worse.
Take Emacs, my prefered IDE. It has a GUI, there is a menu bar, you can open files with a mouse click, multiple tabs for different files, the whole none yards. However it is designed like a GUI for console programmers. You can use it entirely via hot key without ever needing a mouse (in fact that is the primary use) and you tend to have full access to the commands you issue on the command line (with built in shells or building out your own hot keys or whatever way you want to use it). So the userbase that uses it doesnt seem to have the issues I mentioned before where the skill level is inadequate.
But like I said, you use a GUI, it speaks to you, you like it, there is no issue. There are plenty of people who use GUIs who are amazing programmers too. Like I said the "average" doesnt mean it represents you, so those arent judgements about you.
You wanted to know why I, and others, are bias against VSCode so I thought I'd share
@namark @PINE64