My reasoning was that a database administration tool's query editor isn't a programming tool
Well, that does a great disservice to SQL Server Management Studio. Microsoft states on its site:
SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS) is an integrated environment for managing any SQL infrastructure. Use SSMS to access, configure, manage, administer, and develop all components of SQL Server, Azure SQL Database, Azure SQL Managed Instance, SQL Server on Azure VM, and Azure Synapse Analytics. SSMS provides a single comprehensive utility that combines a broad group of graphical tools with many rich script editors to provide access to SQL Server for developers and database administrators of all skill levels.
And I don't think they are bragging here.
SSMS is the go-to tool (and basically installed by default) when you're developing, testing and/or tuning code or scripts that involve SQL Server. And while Visual Studio, Visual Studio Code and Rider to name a few, all have integration with SQL Server, I always find myself ending up on SSMS, because I find it much better suited for database-centric development than anything else. And that has been the case for at least since 2005.
Tools used by programmers in a development context are on-topic and by that definition configuring its editor to improve your development workflow is on-topic as well. Casting close-votes of the type "not about programming" is the wrong vote.