![]() This works similarly to the sql tools team extension in that there is a. ![]() This is basically just a wrapper around the DacFx so there shouldn't be anything too hard and also because it is windows only for now (until the DacFx is cross platform it will only ever be windows, but I hold out hope for cross platform DacFx one day!). I am also not interested in replacing what the sql tools team are doing, I am happy to leave them to do the harder, important but less interesting things to me like t-sql formatting so with that in mind I have started a new project that is very hacky at the moment, more an experiment to see if it will work but a vs code extension that builds dacpacs: I am not really interested in providing ui's like the schema compare - for that use SSDT or spend some money on the Redgate tools. gives us the important things like pre,post deploy scripts, refactoring and the ability to generate dacpac. ![]() is light weight - memory is important for dev machines and 2 gb for a large db project is limiting.The general goals of this are not to re-created the ssdt experience in visual studio but to provide a lighter, faster way of developing sql code, if I can have an extension that: For a long time I have thought about bringing the SSDT experience to other IDE's like Jetbrains IntelliJ but because I have been using vscode quite a lot recently and separately I have been doing more and more javascript and typescript I thought it would be interesting to see how hard it would be to write a vscode extension that lets me build dacpac's. ![]() I use it for all my GO (#golang FTW) work and also powershell and I have been toying with the sql tools team's sql extension which is great. I have been quite interested by vs code and have been using it more and more recently. ![]()
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