![]() ![]() ![]() This code completion tool powered by AI is seriously THE BEST for a faster and cleaner coding experience, while also helping to avoid making mistakes. IntelliJ equivalent: Live Edit (I've yet to try this one, so I'll get back to comment after I've tested it!) Tabnine (This has come particularly handy for me when doing CSS art!) This way, you can see your code up and running immediately as you type. Live Server launches a local development server that refreshes the page automatically every time you make a change in your code. IntelliJ equivalent: Built-In Live Server Not only that, but it also allows you to customize and use your own formatting style. (If you're also an IntelliJ IDEA user, I noticed many of these extensions are present in it as plugins too, so I'll link to those as well in case you're interested in them) Beautifyīeautify is a formatting tool that helps your code look clean and properly indented. ![]() One of the main reasons behind its popularity is certainly the huge variety of extensions it offers, so I jumped straight into installing some. Visual Studio Code is an open-source and multi-platform code editor developed by Microsoft, and one of the most popular IDEs for software development (particularly so for front-end devs). I started my journey with front-end development almost two months ago, and while I've really been enjoying coding on freeCodeCamp and CodePen, I made my official formal step into web development by finally installing Visual Studio Code web-dev plugins last week. ![]()
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