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Goland blog
Goland blog











goland blog
  1. #Goland blog how to#
  2. #Goland blog series#

#Goland blog how to#

We had a couple of webinars, and plan to do more in the future, show both the IDE and how to use it effectively in your day to day life.

#Goland blog series#

a series on how to use the Refactoring features a series on some of the Editing features We also have a blog, where we regularly publish articles about the IDE such as: The IDE contains lessons on how to use it too, in the form of the Features Trainer and allows you to explore the IDE functionality at your own pace. One of the places to start with GoLand is our documentation page. I can’t compare this to vscode though, so maybe that’s not too helpful. One last thing actually, recently learned about the zen mode in intellij, really liking thatĭocker support is likely a downside though, it exists but not the same level of support that RubyMine has yet. Can’t remember what the problem was exactly in vscode though, goto resource I don’t think worked and maybe something about the tf12 syntax? Idk didn’t mess with that too much I guess.

goland blog

The terraform plugin seems a bit better in GoLand as well. That said they both have room for improvement and sometimes I just end up switching back to vim randomly. The Vim plugin is also a bit better, although vscode’s is pretty good as well. For goland I basically just have the vim plugin with all my goto key bindings as priority and I’m set. It working mostly how I want out of the box is also a big part of it, I just don’t like wasting time getting my editor set up right or spending time fixing it for whatever odd configuration I needed. After learning the goland features a bit more I probably won’t be switching back any time soon, I’m sure vscode would be a better comparison but I can’t say I really know it as well. The main thing for me with P圜harm or for the same reason RubyMine is the predictions/autocomplete isn’t terribly useful.Īs far as why I use it over VSCode, it just broke one day and I didn’t want to deal with it. Heavier IDE’s like GoLand tend to be much more useful with strongly typed languages imo.













Goland blog