Have you seen the official Sublime Text Keymap extension? Microsoft released it a couple months ago (as well as an Atom Keymap extension). I have a co-worker who, once he got his hands on the Sublime Text Keymap extension, has never gone back to Sublime. He had used Sublime for years and kept talking about how it was the best, but VS Code won him over big time.
Yeah, I tried the Sublime Text Keymap extension, but as I mentioned, due to bugs in VS Code itself it can't remap multiple cursor selection to Ctrl+Click, and that killed it for me. I'm far too used to Ctrl+Click and from what I read, that sometimes (or all the time, I can't remember for sure) causes VS Code to try to run some or all of your current plugins on whatever word you're hovering over in the file you're currently editing.
Tons of issues and requested or "missing" features often get added in the next few release cycles, if not immediately. Better indentation for languages like Ruby and Lua was just recently introduced as well, for example.
Have you seen the official Sublime Text Keymap extension? Microsoft released it a couple months ago (as well as an Atom Keymap extension). I have a co-worker who, once he got his hands on the Sublime Text Keymap extension, has never gone back to Sublime. He had used Sublime for years and kept talking about how it was the best, but VS Code won him over big time.
Yeah, I tried the Sublime Text Keymap extension, but as I mentioned, due to bugs in VS Code itself it can't remap multiple cursor selection to Ctrl+Click, and that killed it for me. I'm far too used to Ctrl+Click and from what I read, that sometimes (or all the time, I can't remember for sure) causes VS Code to try to run some or all of your current plugins on whatever word you're hovering over in the file you're currently editing.
They added the ability to change the modifier for multi-select and hyper clicks. code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_1...
Tons of issues and requested or "missing" features often get added in the next few release cycles, if not immediately. Better indentation for languages like Ruby and Lua was just recently introduced as well, for example.
Hmm, I may have to check out VS Code again...