Dynamic

Visual Studio Code vs Emacs

The code editor that ate the world, and somehow made us all love it meets an operating system masquerading as an editor. Here's our take.

🧊Nice Pick

Visual Studio Code

The code editor that ate the world, and somehow made us all love it.

Visual Studio Code

Nice Pick

The code editor that ate the world, and somehow made us all love it.

Pros

  • +Lightning-fast startup and performance, even with extensions
  • +Built-in Git integration that actually works without headaches
  • +Extension marketplace so vast it has a plugin for your toaster

Cons

  • -Memory hog when you load too many extensions (we all do it)
  • -Microsoft's telemetry is always watching, even if you turn it off

Emacs

An operating system masquerading as an editor. Org-mode alone is worth the RSI.

Pros

    Cons

      The Verdict

      These tools serve different purposes. Visual Studio Code is a devtools while Emacs is a ai assistants. We picked Visual Studio Code based on overall popularity, but your choice depends on what you're building.

      🧊
      The Bottom Line
      Visual Studio Code wins

      Based on overall popularity. Visual Studio Code is more widely used, but Emacs excels in its own space.

      Disagree with our pick? nice@nicepick.dev