Code formatting is a bit of a religious discussion among developers. Spaces or tabs, whitespace positions, and line endings at certain elements are all part of the style guide to a project.
howto
For the past several months, I’ve been slowly migrating more projects to languages and frameworks that fit better in Visual Studio Code (VSC) vs. Visual Studio. The transition has gone quite smoothly. The add-on support of VSC is excellent and, so far, the performance is hands above Visual Studio (no more coffee breaks while the app starts and loads a project).
Between Slack, Skype, Zoom, Discord, Facebook, and whatever other chats I have loaded on my desktop, a good, comfortable mic is important.
I’ve noticed that windows (Office especially) lags horribly when you drag them around the screen for the past few months. There had to be a fix!
Right now, there’s several Chromebooks that support running the Google Play Store and Android apps natively. Interested? It’s an easy setup!
Since I spend most of my day in the console| PowerShell also serves as my Excel. So| continuing my recent trend of PowerShell related posts| let’s dig into a quick and easy way to parse up CSV files (or most any type of file) by creating objects!
With how mobile we are today with our computers–a work computer, a home computer, laptops, etc.–I found that there are common settings I want to sync across platforms. Here’s how to do it with a bit of PowerShell and a cloud storage provider.