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GitHub supercharges Copilot with third-party extensions to enhance collaboration
It will also help developers to innovate faster and stay in flow longer
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Published onMay 22, 2024
published onMay 22, 2024
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At theBuild 2024 conference, Microsoft announced thatGitHub Copilot in VS code is out from preview and will be available to all.
With this, the Redmond tech giant also introduced GitHub Copilot Extensions, which aim to enable developers to build and deploy to the cloud in natural language and with tools and services of their choice within IDE or GitHub.com.
What extensions will be available?
With the announcement, Microsoft mentioned a handful of extensions, including Docker, DataStax, LambdaTest, McKinsey & Company, LaunchDarkly, Microsoft Azure and Teams, Octopus Deploy, MongoDBPangea, Pinecone, ReadMe, Product Science, Sentry, and Stripe.
These extensions are supported in GitHub Copilot Chat on GitHub.com, VS code, and Visual Studio. The GitHub Marketplace will provide extensions that are open to all, but it will also allow organizations to create private Copilot Extensions for their toolmaking, making things easier for company developers.
How does the GitHub Copilot work?
If you often use many tools while resolving database-related errors or any other development issues, you would have to hop from one tool to another to figure out the issue, find a solution, apply the fix, and then deploy it. However, now, with Copilot Extensions, you can do it all in one place.
They can use GitHub Copilot Chat and invoke all of these tools to gather context, troubleshoot, implement solutions, reduce the time it takes to fix a problem and streamline the workflow.
Cody De Arkland, Product Incubation, LaunchDarkly, said:
The LaunchDarkly extension for GitHub Copilot integrates directly where teams are already building software. With it, developers can access documentation and best practices, right alongside their code. Minimize context switching, maintain flow state, and accelerate software delivery—all from one place.
Tillman Elser, Engineering Manager at Sentry, said:
This is the future of software development, where developers spend less time searching and more time building. Working in natural language, they can write code, retrieve data, and solve problems, all using a single intuitive workflow.
Here is what other extensions can do
GitHub Copilot for Azure preview is limited and offered directly through Microsoft. To try it, you cansign up from this page.
For now, all these extensions, including DataStax, Docker, Lambda Test, LaunchDarkly, McKinsey & Company, Octopus Deploy, Pangea, Pinecone, Product Science, ReadMe, Sentry, and Teams Toolkit on the GitHub Marketplace are limited to invitation only.
However, in the coming weeks, extensions from Stripe, MongoDB, and Microsoft (including Teams Toolkit and Microsoft 365) will be generally available on Visual Studio Marketplace for VS code.
How do you think these GitHub Copilot extensions will help? Share your views with our readers in the comments section below.
More about the topics:GitHub Copilot
Srishti Sisodia
Windows Software Expert
Srishti Sisodia is an electronics engineer and writer with a passion for technology. She has extensive experience exploring the latest technological advancements and sharing her insights through informative blogs.
Her diverse interests bring a unique perspective to her work, and she approaches everything with commitment, enthusiasm, and a willingness to learn. That’s why she’s part of Windows Report’s Reviewers team, always willing to share the real-life experience with any software or hardware product. She’s also specialized in Azure, cloud computing, and AI.
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Srishti Sisodia
Windows Software Expert
She is an electronics engineer and writer with a passion for technology. Srishti is specialized in Azure, cloud computing, and AI.