42 WebStorm Tips and Tricks

JetBrains April 30, 2020
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We make you a better (professional) software developer. JetBrains creates intelligent software development tools consistently used and trusted by 11.4 million professionals and 88 Fortune Global Top 100 companies. Our lineup of more than 30 products includes IDEs for most programming languages and technologies, such as IntelliJ IDEA, PyCharm, and others, as well as products for team collaboration, like YouTrack and TeamCity. JetBrains is also known for creating the Kotlin programming language, a cross-platform language used by more than 5 million developers worldwide yearly and recommended by Google as the preferred language for Android development. Learn more about us and our products at https://www.jetbrains.com/

Video Description

#WebStorm brings a bunch of IDE features to professional #JavaScript and web development. Want to "level up" and learn #productivity boosters? This hands-on, fast-paced workshop covers tips across all the major product features. Many of these tips come from the WebStorm Guide: https://www.jetbrains.com/webstorm/guide/tips/ Contents (Not all 42) 00:00 - Introduction 03:04 - Show the WebStorm Guide's tips page 04:20 - First tip: Find Action 05:28 - Slim down the IDE by turning off some tools 06:35 - Turn off tabs 10:50 - Navigate by Symbol 13:38 - Activate Navigation Bar 27:45 - Generate Imports 45:58 - Evaluate Expression During Debugging 51:00 - Undo Last Commit 52:30 - Wrap Selection With Tag 54:00 - Cover audience-submitted tips Note: This webinar will use Create React App as a demo application. Not because the webinar is React- or TS-centric, but just to have a meaningful starting point. Resources: WebStorm - https://jb.gg/8e9mp5 WebStorm blog - https://jb.gg/ubpbwv WebStorm Twitter - https://twitter.com/webstormide About the Presenter: Paul Everitt is the PyCharm and WebStorm Developer Advocate at JetBrains. Before that, Paul was a co-founder of Zope Corporation, taking the first open source application server through $14M of funding. Paul has bootstrapped both the Python Software Foundation and the Plone Foundation. Prior to that, Paul was an officer in the US Navy, starting www.navy.mil in 1993.