
The terminal is readily available for any moment you need it as an IDE tool window. Place breakpoints directly inside the source code, explore the call stack and the variables, use the interactive console, and set watches all within the IDE. WebStorm features a debugger, letting you debug your client-side Node.js applications without any hassle and all inside the IDE. With an extensive list of features and tools, such as on the fly error correction, you’ll code faster and more robust programs than you’d be able to otherwise. Using WebStorm will let you get a ledge up on your previous coding experience, and you can try it all out with a free 30-day trial.
Add global and exported symbols into components in Angular: WebStorm will automatically add an import for global and exported symbols into your components on code completion when working in Angular templates.Take advantage of the deeply integrated build tools, linters, REST client, and test runners among many other tools as you code and develop. Component imports on copy-paste for more frameworks: WebStorm now automatically adds all the required imports for Vue, Svelte, Astro, and Angular templates when you copy and paste code from one file to another. It is enabled when you set the lang attribute in a script tag to ts. TypeScript support in Vue templates: We’ve added TypeScript support in Vue templates. The plugin provides basic functionality, including syntax highlighting, code completion with automatic imports, refactorings, navigation, and correct formatting.
Astro support: Long-awaited Astro support has landed in WebStorm with our new plugin. Let’s take a brief look at some of the most interesting improvements in v2023.1: Otherwise, you’ll need to sign up for a 30-day free trial to install and run this build. Unlike our previous EAP builds, you must have an active WebStorm license to use it. With the release date just around the corner, we’re happy to present the release candidate for WebStorm 2023.1.