I was put off by the subscription model because of insecurity of having to pay indefinitely. The first thing you may think as soon as you notice that the business model is a subscription based in their website : "I don't want to subscribe to a mere text editor!!" Well text editor is our tool of the trade and is hard to perfect so you may need to reconsider its worth.Īnyways, I would be fine with one-off payment. It's these details that make a difference.
I will go as far as very little polishes, since fundamentally all modern code editor could do the same job. #BEST VISUAL STUDIO CODE UNITY THEMES HOW TO#
How to make Rider more like VSCode for those who liked VSCode, but just want that one bug fixed or that feature added now without waiting for submitted issue to be resolved in VSCode. What better or worse things in Rider compared to VSCode. And how to modify Rider so it looks more like VSCode, so I could get both bug fixes and simple looks. I just want a beefed up text editor like VSCode but without little flaws. It is famous for its "intelligence" as an IDE or deep Unity integration, that I am not really care at the moment. Rider is not even famous for these annoyances fix I would like to pay for. (Of course, after knowing several years passed with no resolution about them.) But in this competitive scene of text editor, it is tempting to pay just to eliminate those annoyances from the tool I touch every day. Visual Studio Code is almost perfect, very very few annoyances. I switched from Atom to VSCode years ago simply because I like blocky and flat UI, but soon I discovered that VSCode has just the right amount of features yet well tucked away from view.