FileSequence is an cross platform application which uses a static code analysis tool to create relationships between your codebase files so we can show how and which files depends upon each other. For now we support JavaScript and we are also capable of categorising types of dependencies, for example third party ones that are from npm packages, NodeJs native modules, require and import statements. We also integrate with GitLab and GitHub to visualize a merge request/pull request visually, so we can show how the new files depend on each other or what other files of the codebase they are using, we also detect new npm dependencies. We plan to eventually support Go, Python and a few other languages.
FileSequence's answer:
We provide a fast, cross-platform application that runs locally on your machine, we don't depend on internet code repositories, which means your source code is safe as we don't expose any piece of it to the internet. Through our tree graph visualization of your codebase files, you can recursively expand each file dependencies and see what those dependencies depend upon on, until we arrive at the last used dependency.
FileSequence's answer:
Backend developers, frontend developers, or software engineers, if you are experienced or just beginning, we can help you understand any codebase faster by showing the code architecture visually, through a tree graph, which you can quickly understand the impact of changing one file would potentially have across the codebase
FileSequence's answer:
It all started in 2022 when we discovered SourceTrail, unfortunately, that tool isn't updated anymore and now is open-source, it's reach was rather limited by only supporting C++, seeing the advance of the "web of components" because of the big JavaScript frameworks, we got inspired to try something similar, but targeting JavaScript first, so in a complex component driven codebase, you can still see where each component is needed and what dependencies they have.
FileSequence's answer:
Electron, WebGL and React
FileSequence's answer:
We allow our users to configure the applications they want to parse with FileSequence, in an enterprise JavaScript codebase for example, it's likely a bundler ("Webpack", "Vite", to name a few) is being used, which may have "import aliases", "module paths" and different file extensions (like .mjs, .cjs, or even .tsx, .ts) without considering that, it wouldn't be possible to make correct connections between the codebase files, and we are the first ones to integrate that into a code visualization tool.
Based on our record, Visual Studio Live Share seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 22 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Visual Studio Live Share is an extension for the popular Visual Studio Code IDE that allows developers to bring their peers into their editor. You can send an invite link to let your colleagues write, edit, and debug code as if they were in the same physical location as you. This removes the challenges of working remotely when it comes to pair programming and brainstorming together. - Source: dev.to / 8 months ago
Have you checked out Live Share? It's included in VS and there's an extension for VS Code. Source: about 1 year ago
Visual Studio has collaboration tools. Source: about 1 year ago
Pair programming is when two developers work together at one workstation. Not necessarily on the same computer, but they work together on the same programming task. In remote work I love to use Visual Studio Live Share ❤️. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
But there's also an extension that MS put out called Live Share. They have a version for both VS and VS Code. I've used the VSC one myself, to great effect. Source: over 1 year ago
CodeShare.io - Realtime code sharing for developers
Codex - Codex is a VS Code extension that allows any engineer to attach comments, questions or any kind of content to specific lines of code.
CodeTogether - Live share IDEs and coding sessions. See changes in real time.
Figstack - Your intelligent coding companion
Teletype for Atom - Collaborate in real time in Atom
CodeSee Maps - Maps are auto-generated, self-updating code diagrams.