When you edit documents in various formats daily, the universality of the document tools matters a lot. If your instruments work with only a few of the popular formats, you may find yourself switching between application windows to clean up code in cgi and manage other document formats. If you want to take away the hassle of document editing, get a platform that can effortlessly handle any extension.
With DocHub, you do not need to focus on anything short of the actual document editing. You will not have to juggle applications to work with diverse formats. It can help you edit your cgi as effortlessly as any other extension. Create cgi documents, edit, and share them in a single online editing platform that saves you time and improves your efficiency. All you need to do is register a free account at DocHub, which takes just a few minutes or so.
You will not need to become an editing multitasker with DocHub. Its feature set is enough for fast document editing, regardless of the format you need to revise. Begin with creating a free account and see how effortless document management may be with a tool designed particularly to suit your needs.
on todays visual studio toolbox were going to take a look at code made a visual studio extension that cleans and simplifies your code you are not gonna want to miss this one hi welcome to visual studio toolbox Im your host Robert Greene and joining me today on skype from Indianapolis is Steve Cadwallader hey Steve how are you doing great how are you excellent steve is the author of code made which is a visual studio extension that hes going to show us it has more than a million downloads and its very well received and Steve youre going to show us all about this extension and all the wonderful things it does tell us a little bit about why you wrote it and when did you write it sure yeah I started writing it in 2006 and first published it in 2007 I wrote it because I was very particular about the way the code is organized and cleaning up whitespace and little things and like most developers got tired of doing things automatically and I kind of got into it from a friend Eric Potter