![]() ![]() ![]() Soon, I hope to have an interesting blog post to share that talks about how you can ditch Visual Studio entirely and code with Visual Studio Code for your ARM Templates or Bicep templates. It combines many command-line tools and shells such as Command Prompt, PowerShell and WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux). I typically only use it now for weird nested ARM templates or ARM templates with a lot of DSC. The Windows Terminal is a modern, fast, efficient, powerful and productive terminal application. I still have Visual Studio installed on my desktop, don't judge. At the time of this blog post, Windows Terminal is on version 1.3 and Windows Terminal Preview is on version 1.4. In my own terminal, I have the traditional DOS command prompt, PowerShell, Azure Cloud Shell, Ubuntu, Developer Command Prompt for VS 2022, and Developer PowerShell for VS 2022. The biggest reason I find it invaluable is you can have a number of different profiles loaded up underneath 1 application. I was reluctant to embrace the tool myself, but that recently changed. If you're not, maybe take some time to use it after reading more about what it can do for you inside the Microsoft official documentation. Let's take a few steps back and note that everyone should be using the Windows Terminal. I recently went down a windy road to get my Windows Terminal customized.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |