![]() The newest 16" MacBooks have 8 core i9 processors, and if you buy the 32GB version and spend the $100 on the professional version of parallels, you can run macos and windows side by side and the laptop doesn't break a sweat. For the times when I do need VS (non core projects), I can bootcamp or parallels into windows. Rider has a free trial, download the windows version and give it a few days to see what you think. If you want to give it another go I would suggest looking up creating VSCode snippets, they're quite handy. I'll also preface that I've come from a background of doing C++ in vim for many years with no plugins so I'm also quite used to not having any intellisense and relying on good documentation. But a lot of it comes down to personal preference. ![]() Whilst VS + Resharper had a lot of benefits, I still feel as productive just because even on my quite decent dev machine VS would hang every now and then and felt generally very sluggish to use, not to mention dealing with Windows became a daily annoyance so those cons still out weigh the cons of Linux + VSCode for me. I've always used the terminal for doing things so using dotnet new has never been an issue for me. I've created snippets for generating common class structures quite quickly. ![]() That said I've created a bunch of snippets to generate classes with my generic template with regions and common using statements. Before that I used VS with Resharper for several years.īasically yes you aren't going to get the same features to help get things done quicker. Net on Linux for about 2 years now professionally.
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