This would bite me in the ass because I often ignore these kinds of warnings in VSCode (SFDX for VSC is kinda crap, warns you about nonissues, and often doesn’t correctly identify the problem).
Confusable characters get a little yellow box which is different from the squiggly underlines most linters and stuff use which at least makes it a bit more recogniseable.
Personally I can’t stand having underlines all over my code, so I’ll usually just “fix” the non-issue if possible, or otherwise just disable whatever the warning is entirely.
I love that look, ugh. The inline errors are much more visually appealing vs the usual squiggly underline
I might need to look at vscodium since I’m not too keen on having more microsoft telemetry on my desktop. Been using Atom for personal projects thus far.
This would bite me in the ass because I often ignore these kinds of warnings in VSCode (SFDX for VSC is kinda crap, warns you about nonissues, and often doesn’t correctly identify the problem).
Confusable characters get a little yellow box which is different from the squiggly underlines most linters and stuff use which at least makes it a bit more recogniseable.
Personally I can’t stand having underlines all over my code, so I’ll usually just “fix” the non-issue if possible, or otherwise just disable whatever the warning is entirely.
Ahh the solution is simple, in VS Code add these lines to your general config
"workbench.colorCustomizations": { "editorError.foreground": "#00000000", "editorWarning.foreground": "#00000000", "editorInfo.foreground": "#00000000", },
Then get the error lens extension, it’s so much more pleasant. Visual example
I love that look, ugh. The inline errors are much more visually appealing vs the usual squiggly underline
I might need to look at vscodium since I’m not too keen on having more microsoft telemetry on my desktop. Been using Atom for personal projects thus far.
Maybe have a look into Gremlins Tracker