As I said in the title, for some reason when I run something in the terminal the result appears in 20 characters. This is how the terminal looks like.
Don't mind the text itself, I'm still learning how to use Cucumber with Javascript, but don't have a lot of luck.
I tried reinstalling VS Code, but didn't help.
Related
I have SWI-Prolog 8.2.4 installed, and I was trying to get it to work in Visual Studio Code with the extension "VSC-Prolog" made by Arthurwang.
If I try to run a program, everything works correctly, however I realized that I cannot use the gtrace tool, because when I try to do it, a strange message appears on the console asking me if I was not wrong and I wanted to write "trace" (which is something different than what I'm looking for).
What I tried later is to write gtrace in the console but outside of Visual Studio Code to see if there I could make use of that tool. However, the same problem appears:
However, if I open swi-prolog's default text editor (swipl-win.exe), gtrace works fine there.
Why could this be happening, and how could I fix it?
Hope I can use prolog correctly in Visual Studio Code.
Visual studio code has too many annoying suggestions.
But the real one are not showing at the first time, unless we input enough prefix characters.
Any idea? Wrong settings?
I don't know how to describe my problem except via picture.
Don't judge my code, but if you look between the letters you will see random bits of characters. This Doesn't seem to effect how it compiles and runs, but I really want it to go away.
I've tried restarting visual studio code, closing the document withing visual studio code and reopening, and restarting my computer. Beyond that, I have no ideas. I think this problem may have started when I elected to install C/C++ Intellisense.
a Screenshot of my Code
fyi: I don't know how to word my problem in a way that helps google take me to relevant sources.
When I first started using Visual Studio Code for my cobol, it was working fine. But lately when I try to compile my code after saving it in vsc it gives errors about there being weird characters.
If I do the same changes in Notepad++ it works fine. I've been going through the settings in vsc but I cannot find anything wrong in there. But then again I don't know that much about it. I'm also using the extension cobol syntax support from bitlang.
Does anybody know how this is possible? Is there some setting that messes this up? I cannot really show any screens or anything. since this is all work related and I'm not allowed to share.
My guess is, that this is related to the code page used to save the project.
Notepad++ by default uses UTF-8. you may need to change the code page on Visual Studio Code to UTF-8.
https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/getstarted/settings
I'm coming from a pure Windows Visual Studio programming background with little Linux experience. It seems possible to use VS Code to program in Julia, but I can't figure out how to get things set up correctly.
Does anybody have good example launch.json, tasks.json, or other files that can serve as an example to build from?
This would be a great thing to see in a detailed tutorial.
Here is how things work if you are using the Julia extension for VisualStudio Code.
The extension adds a bunch of new commands. They all start with "julia", so filtering by that string should show you everything you can do with the extension.
In terms of running Julia code, the extension offers only two options right now. First, you can execute a command to start a REPL. This will just show a default Julia prompt, and you can interact with it like you would with any other Julia REPL. The second is that there is also a command, triggered by Ctrl + Enter, to send either the current editor selection or the current editor line to this REPL.
There is currently no further integration offered by the Julia extension. We do plan to add debugger support in the future, at which point I would expect F5 to start the current file in the debugger, or something like that. But that functionality is probably a couple of months away.