
One of its most useful features is a full-fledged extensibility model that lets developers build language extensions as well as debug and test tools into the editor. It’s a flexible, extensible editor for programmers that offers many of the features of an integrated development environment with the ease of a simple editor. Visual Studio Code has rapidly become one of Microsoft’s most useful developer tools. SEE: Manage Active Directory with these 11 PowerShell scripts (TechRepublic Premium) Code and PowerShell Microsoft recommends using its Visual Studio Code editor along with the official PowerShell plugin. While the PowerShell ISE is still part of Windows, if you’re working with PowerShell 7, you’re going to need a development tool that works across all the supported platforms.

The underlying philosophy and language grammar remain the same, but the old PowerShell ISE development tooling is no longer under development and not supported for newer releases. NET and support macOS and Linux alongside the familiar Windows, making it a powerful management tool for all your systems. The latest releases of PowerShell are built on the current cross-platform.

PowerShell is now a lot more than a system management tool for Windows. Learn how to use Microsoft's programmers' editor, Visual Studio Code, to get the most from the latest PowerShell releases. Use Visual Studio Code to edit and debug PowerShell
