A lot of installs (compared to other extensions) and a bunch of 5 star reviews: After The Deadline - a Spell Checker for Wordpress (and other things)īut then, at the top of the description, I found this message greeting me: Clicking through… The Spelling and Grammar Checker for Visual Studio Code As I was still pretty new to the ecosystem, I was sort of interested as to what information you got about extensions, and whether or not I'd found the spell check plugin for Visual Studio Code, or just a plugin. You can also see in the above screen shot that you get a link to details about the extension. The clear winner here is Sean McBreen's Spelling and Grammar Checker. Visual Studio gives you a nice browsing interface to find likely packages, and even get a sense of how popular they are. And guess what, there is: The Spelling and Grammar Checker for Visual Studio Code No problem I thought, I bet there is an extension for that. I realised that unlike Sublime, Visual Studio Code wasn't doing any spell checking out of the box. I like what I've seen so far, but something interesting came up today. I was also keen to see what the New Microsoft could offer a non-microsofty like myself. The reason I was giving it a look is that it has pretty good support for editing Go, a language I am trying to find the time to learn. For those who don't know, it's a free source code editor from Microsoft which works cross-platform. I have been playing around with the very nice Visual Studio Code editor recently. Update: This post has hit Hacker News - you might want to follow the comments over there. Want to spell check? Read the fine print Posted on May 30 2016
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