![]() I was already used to JetBrains IDEs as I worked before with Android Studio which is based on IntelliJ IDEA. I really liked it because it was much faster, highly customizable and free so that I could also use it for my private projects.Īdditionally, I got a WebStorm license from my company and could, therefore, use it without any restrictions.Īs Visual Studio Code got more and more popular I used it for my further web projects. In my current project, I met a developer who was really confused that I was using an editor and not an IDE for the development of large business applications. First, I did not really consider his concerns but meanwhile, I understand him. In this blog post, I want to tell you why I now mainly use WebStorm instead of VS Code for development. This is a very hot topic and I know this will cause some controversy. In the following article, I talk about my experience using WebStorm in a large Angular application which was mainly developed in VS Code. WebStorm provides a robust, fast, and flexible static code analysis. This analysis detects language and runtime errors, suggests corrections and improvements. It also indexes your whole project and can, for example, detect all unused methods, variables and more. You can also detect unused methods in JavaScript methods using VS Code and ESLint with the rules no-unused-vars and no-unreachable. But if you are, for example, using a TypeScript project (like Angular) VS Code does not detect unused public methods. This can have a huge impact on the code quality of a large Angular code base which was mainly developed using VS Code. To see the difference open your project which was developed in VS Code with WebStorm and run the code inspection. ![]() This was basically what convinced me that using WebStorm results in a cleaner code base. ![]() WebStorm has an integrated test runner which I really like. This way you can run your tests directly from the IDE and even debug them there. Running my jasmine & Karma tests in WebStorm I can easily jump to the failed test code and rerun only this specific test. The following image shows such a test run: My Angular unit test workflow in VS Code is normally to mark a describe or it test block with a f (e.g. fdescribe) which tells Karma to only run this certain test block. Alternatively, I use the karma-jasmine-html-reporter where you can also define to run only certain tests by clicking on them in the HTML page.
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