VSCodium is a community-driven, freely-licensed binary distribution of Microsoft’s editor VS Code.
How Different is this from Visual Studio code ?
Microsoft’s vscode source code is open source (MIT-licensed), but the product available for download (Visual Studio Code) is licensed under this not-FLOSS license
Go through GitHub comment made by Visual Studio code maintainer
https://github.com/Microsoft/vscode/issues/60#issuecomment-161792005
When we [Microsoft] build Visual Studio Code, we do exactly this. We clone the vscode repository, we lay down a customized product.json that has Microsoft specific functionality (telemetry, gallery, logo, etc.), and then produce a build that we release under our license.
When you clone and build from the vscode repo, none of these endpoints are configured in the default product.json. Therefore, you generate a “clean” build, without the Microsoft customizations, which is by default licensed under the MIT licenseThe VSCodium project exists so that you don’t have to download+build from source. This project includes special build scripts that clone Microsoft’s vscode repo, run the build commands, and upload the resulting binaries for you
How do we download VScodium ?
https://github.com/VSCodium/vscodium/releases
Give it a try and Let me know in comments , will post top 10 extensions we can use for VSCodium.
Top comments (9)
An interesting read on the same topic:
Visual Studio Code is designed to fracture
I used to think GitHub Codespaces would help popularise Gitpod but now realize it is the other way around. Gitpod is currently permitted to exist in the Visual Studio Code ecosystem to popularise GitHub Codespaces, and Microsoft can step in at any moment to create legal crises that strategically divide the market from a business perspective because, like Apple and their AppStore: it is their ecosystem that they control and they are in absolute control.
SublimeText is always my editor of choice though.
yes, SublimeText is my first choice as well
unfortunately it's missing the remote connect tooling that VSCode has, it forced me to go back. My usage pattern is to connect to a VM that has my development setup or a remote server, and then do the programming from there.
Ehy Rolf same workflow here :-)
I use Codium, as I don't need Microsoft's extensions to Visual Studio Code. Likewise, I prefer Chromium to Edge or Google Chrome, and I even used AOSP (Android Open Source Project) although I did miss some of Google's add-ons then. But in general, if there is open source, and if we want to support open source, we should use open source (without the closed source extensions that we don't need).
you don't need to download vscodium if you are on arch, arch already has free build of vscode before everyone else gitlab.archlinux.org/archlinux/pac...
archlinux.org/packages/extra/x86_6...
I switched to vscodium a while ago. I had to make trade off and stop working inside Docker containers with Dev Containers extension :) Also, WSL extension for vscodium breaks often and it's downside of using vscodium with a virtual machine :/
Been using Codium since release day, no issues