Code select all word

Several options have been listed, but a couple are missing. Its possible to use the rename and refactoring tools, for not just selecting all, but making specific changes, after everything has been selected. I am going to try and bundle all answers I feel are relevant together, and add two more that, not only get the job done, but are really great tools for making single changes over multiple occurrences of the same code.


1. Select All Matches


To use multiple cursors to select all matches, you can use 1 of 2 keybindings. Both keybindings preform the same functionality, so in other words, 2 keybindings, 1 vscode command. The keybindings are as follows.

1. CTRL + F2
2. CTRL + SHIFT + L
Default Keybinding
{
  "key": "ctrl+f2",
  "command": "editor.action.changeAll",
  "when": "editorTextFocus && !editorReadonly"
}

// You can view/customize VSCode keybindings by pressing F1 and typing Keybindings

2. Select Next Match


You can Select Next Match by using the keybinding below. This is good for selecting all occurrences within a specific vicinity.

CTRL + D

Default Keybinding
{
  "key": "ctrl+d",
  "command": "editor.action.addSelectionToNextFindMatch",
  "when": "editorFocus"
}
 
SIDE NOTE
If you press the keybinding CTRL + K before pressing CTRL + D, instead of selecting the next instance, it will move you to the next instance, and target it with your cursor.
Default Keybinding

3. Rename


This one hasn’t been mentioned yet, but this one is what you would except when doing a refactor in a traditional IDE, like Visual Studio 2022, or JetBrains: IntelliJ.

When you use this keybinding, it attempts to solve some of the problems that are incurred when using the other options listed above. The other options are overly greedy sometimes, and select parts of words that you didn’t want to select, and if your not careful, you can delete quite a bit of code, resulting in messy situation. If you didn’t notice that you screwed up right away, you end up saving, or working for a long while before having to reset everything, and you end up loosing a lot of work & time.

F2 attempts to solve this problem by implementing logic under the hood (IDK if its an algorithm or what it is) but it feels very much like refactor in Visual Studio. It only selects specific cases that you would want to target. So if a varable is named foo, is won’t select foo from a var named fooFoo. It also won’t select foo from a comment.

F2

{
  "key": "f2",
  "command": "editor.action.rename",
  "when": "editorHasRenameProvider && editorTextFocus && !editorReadonly"
}

4. Find


This one I will keep short and sweet, but find will iterate through ever occurrence of a pattern that you type into the editor-widget.

Press CTRL + F then type what you want to select. Keep pressing ENTER until you find it.

5. The Best For Last


There is not one method for selecting all occurrences that is the best every time, that’s why there are several different methods for doing it, however, there are some methods that are generally more useful than others. This feature, as far as I know, is unique to VS Code, and I use it all the time when working with large JSON files, and Large Code Bases (like an Open Source PR).

VS Code has its own search editor, its a special editor. You can open the search editor by pressing on the Magnifying Glass Icon on the Activity-bar. Type into the search editors side bar text-input what it is you want to select, then press ENTER. It will return all the results in the sidebar. You can use the lower text input, to replace all of the results with what ever you like. You can also click OPEN IN THE EDITOR (it looks like a link) and it will reproduce everything you searched for in a new document, that is opened to the side. From there you can manipulate it, and add it back to the document. I’ve already written enough for one answer, so I am not going to go to deep into every thing it can do, but this not only selects everything, it also extracts it, replaces it, lets you nit-pick exactly what it means to select «all» of a specific occurrence. It’s a great tool for making a single change in a recursive fashion.

IE: say I double click "LAYOUT:MENU-TRADE": I want to select the entire constant. Or at least the entire MENU-TRADE part.

enter image description here

In atom I can accomplish this by removing - as an ignored character. How is this accomplished in VSCode?

asked Sep 13, 2018 at 15:29

Leon Gaban's user avatar

Access in Settings the entry of
editor.wordSeparators whose default value is :

"`~!@#$%^&*()-=+[{]}\|;:'",.<>/?".

Remove the hyphen, so double-click will select hyphenated words.

answered Sep 13, 2018 at 16:27

harrymc's user avatar

harrymcharrymc

439k30 gold badges506 silver badges885 bronze badges

1

Select All Occurrences of Find Match editor.action.selectHighlights.

n

Ctrl+Shift+L

n

Cmd+Shift+L or Cmd+Ctrl+G on Mac

According to Key Bindings for Visual Studio Code theres:

n

Ctrl+Shift+L to select all occurrences of current selection

n

and

n

Ctrl+F2 to select all occurrences of current word

n

You can view the currently active keyboard shortcuts in VS Code in the Command Palette (View -> Command Palette) or in the Keyboard Shortcuts editor (File > Preferences > Keyboard Shortcuts).

visual studio code – Select all occurrences of selected word in VSCode

b’

What if you want to select just a few?

n

No problem, first:

n

    n

  1. Ctrl+F find the letters by typing them
  2. n

  3. ESC to quit searching (you need to this even when using Ctrl+Shift+L to select all occurences)
  4. n

n

OR

n

    n

  1. just select those letters with your mouse or keyboard (Shift+arrows)
  2. n

n

Now that the mouse cursor is blinking on your first selection, using a few more Key Bindings (thanks for the ref j08691) you may:

n

    n

  • Ctrl+D select the next occurrence
  • n

  • Ctrl+K+Ctrl+D skip the next occurrence
  • n

  • Ctrl+U undo one of the above
  • n

Example 1: vs code select same word

Ctrl + D, Ctrl+Shift+L

Example 2: select all instances vscode

Ctrl+Shift+L

Cmd+Shift+L or Cmd+Ctrl+G on Mac

Example 3: multiple word select in vs code

//Selects the word at the cursor, or the next occurrence of the current selection.
Ctrl+D 

//To add cursors to all the occurrences of a highlighted word 
Ctrl+Shift+L 
//Then select all occurrences of that word

Tags:

Misc Example

Related

Visual Studio Code is an editor first and foremost, and includes the features you need for highly productive source code editing. This topic takes you through the basics of the editor and helps you get moving with your code.

Keyboard shortcuts

Being able to keep your hands on the keyboard when writing code is crucial for high productivity. VS Code has a rich set of default keyboard shortcuts as well as allowing you to customize them.

  • Keyboard Shortcuts Reference — Learn the most commonly used and popular keyboard shortcuts by downloading the reference sheet.
  • Install a Keymap extension — Use the keyboard shortcuts of your old editor (such as Sublime Text, Atom, and Vim) in VS Code by installing a Keymap extension.
  • Customize Keyboard Shortcuts — Change the default keyboard shortcuts to fit your style.

Multiple selections (multi-cursor)

VS Code supports multiple cursors for fast simultaneous edits. You can add secondary cursors (rendered thinner) with Alt+Click. Each cursor operates independently based on the context it sits in. A common way to add more cursors is with ⌥⌘↓ (Windows Ctrl+Alt+Down, Linux Shift+Alt+Down) or ⌥⌘↑ (Windows Ctrl+Alt+Up, Linux Shift+Alt+Up) that insert cursors below or above.

Note: Your graphics card driver (for example NVIDIA) might overwrite these default shortcuts.

Multi-cursor

⌘D (Windows, Linux Ctrl+D) selects the word at the cursor, or the next occurrence of the current selection.

Multi-cursor-next-word

Tip: You can also add more cursors with ⇧⌘L (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+L), which will add a selection at each occurrence of the current selected text.

Multi-cursor modifier

If you’d like to change the modifier key for applying multiple cursors to Cmd+Click on macOS and Ctrl+Click on Windows and Linux, you can do so with the editor.multiCursorModifier setting. This lets users coming from other editors such as Sublime Text or Atom continue to use the keyboard modifier they are familiar with.

The setting can be set to:

  • ctrlCmd — Maps to Ctrl on Windows and Cmd on macOS.
  • alt — The existing default Alt.

There’s also a menu item Use Ctrl+Click for Multi-Cursor in the Selection menu to quickly toggle this setting.

The Go to Definition and Open Link gestures will also respect this setting and adapt such that they do not conflict. For example, when the setting is ctrlCmd, multiple cursors can be added with Ctrl/Cmd+Click, and opening links or going to definition can be invoked with Alt+Click.

Shrink/expand selection

Quickly shrink or expand the current selection. Trigger it with ⌃⇧⌘← (Windows, Linux Shift+Alt+Left) and ⌃⇧⌘→ (Windows, Linux Shift+Alt+Right).

Here’s an example of expanding the selection with ⌃⇧⌘→ (Windows, Linux Shift+Alt+Right):

Expand selection

Column (box) selection

Place the cursor in one corner and then hold Shift+Alt while dragging to the opposite corner:

Column text selection

Note: This changes to Shift+Ctrl/Cmd when using Ctrl/Cmd as multi-cursor modifier.

There are also default key bindings for column selection on macOS and Windows, but not on Linux.

Key Command Command ID
⇧↓ (Windows Ctrl+Shift+Alt+Down, Linux ) Column Select Down cursorColumnSelectDown
⇧↑ (Windows Ctrl+Shift+Alt+Up, Linux ) Column Select Up cursorColumnSelectUp
⇧← (Windows Ctrl+Shift+Alt+Left, Linux ) Column Select Left cursorColumnSelectLeft
⇧→ (Windows Ctrl+Shift+Alt+Right, Linux ) Column Select Right cursorColumnSelectRight
⇧PageDown (Windows Ctrl+Shift+Alt+PageDown, Linux ) Column Select Page Down cursorColumnSelectPageDown
⇧PageUp (Windows Ctrl+Shift+Alt+PageUp, Linux ) Column Select Page Up cursorColumnSelectPageUp

You can edit your keybindings.json to bind them to something more familiar if you want.

Column Selection mode

The user setting Editor: Column Selection controls this feature. Once this mode is entered, as indicated in the Status bar, the mouse gestures and the arrow keys will create a column selection by default. This global toggle is also accessible via the Selection > Column Selection Mode menu item. In addition, one can also disable Column Selection mode from the Status bar.

Save / Auto Save

By default, VS Code requires an explicit action to save your changes to disk, ⌘S (Windows, Linux Ctrl+S).

However, it’s easy to turn on Auto Save, which will save your changes after a configured delay or when focus leaves the editor. With this option turned on, there is no need to explicitly save the file. The easiest way to turn on Auto Save is with the File > Auto Save toggle that turns on and off save after a delay.

For more control over Auto Save, open User or Workspace settings and find the associated settings:

  • files.autoSave: Can have the values:
    • off — to disable auto save.
    • afterDelay — to save files after a configured delay (default 1000 ms).
    • onFocusChange — to save files when focus moves out of the editor of the dirty file.
    • onWindowChange — to save files when the focus moves out of the VS Code window.
  • files.autoSaveDelay: Configures the delay in milliseconds when files.autoSave is configured to afterDelay. The default is 1000 ms.

Hot Exit

VS Code will remember unsaved changes to files when you exit by default. Hot exit is triggered when the application is closed via File > Exit (Code > Quit on macOS) or when the last window is closed.

You can configure hot exit by setting files.hotExit to the following values:

  • "off": Disable hot exit.
  • "onExit": Hot exit will be triggered when the application is closed, that is when the last window is closed on Windows/Linux or when the workbench.action.quit command is triggered (from the Command Palette, keyboard shortcut or menu). All windows without folders opened will be restored upon next launch.
  • "onExitAndWindowClose": Hot exit will be triggered when the application is closed, that is when the last window is closed on Windows/Linux or when the workbench.action.quit command is triggered (from the Command Palette, keyboard shortcut or menu), and also for any window with a folder opened regardless of whether it is the last window. All windows without folders opened will be restored upon next launch. To restore folder windows as they were before shutdown, set window.restoreWindows to all.

If something happens to go wrong with hot exit, all backups are stored in the following folders for standard install locations:

  • Windows %APPDATA%CodeBackups
  • macOS $HOME/Library/Application Support/Code/Backups
  • Linux $HOME/.config/Code/Backups

Find and Replace

VS Code allows you to quickly find text and replace in the currently opened file. Press ⌘F (Windows, Linux Ctrl+F) to open the Find Widget in the editor, search results will be highlighted in the editor, overview ruler and minimap.

If there are more than one matched result in the current opened file, you can press Enter and ⇧Enter (Windows, Linux Shift+Enter) to navigate to next or previous result when the find input box is focused.

Seed Search String From Selection

When the Find Widget is opened, it will automatically populate the selected text in the editor into the find input box. If the selection is empty, the word under the cursor will be inserted into the input box instead.

Seed Search String From Selection

This feature can be turned off by setting editor.find.seedSearchStringFromSelection to false.

Find In Selection

By default, the find operations are run on the entire file in the editor. It can also be run on selected text. You can turn this feature on by clicking the hamburger icon on the Find Widget.

Find In Selection

If you want it to be the default behavior of the Find Widget, you can set editor.find.autoFindInSelection to always, or to multiline, if you want it to be run on selected text only when multiple lines of content are selected.

Advanced find and replace options

In addition to find and replace with plain text, the Find Widget also has three advanced search options:

  • Match Case
  • Match Whole Word
  • Regular Expression

The replace input box support case preserving, you can turn it on by clicking the Preserve Case (AB) button.

Multiline support and Find Widget resizing

You can search multiple line text by pasting the text into the Find input box and Replace input box. Pressing Ctrl+Enter inserts a new line in the input box.

Multiple Line Support

While searching long text, the default size of Find Widget might be too small. You can drag the left sash to enlarge the Find Widget or double click the left sash to maximize it or shrink it to its default size.

Resize Find Widget

Search across files

VS Code allows you to quickly search over all files in the currently opened folder. Press ⇧⌘F (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+F) and enter your search term. Search results are grouped into files containing the search term, with an indication of the hits in each file and its location. Expand a file to see a preview of all of the hits within that file. Then single-click on one of the hits to view it in the editor.

A simple text search across files

Tip: We support regular expression searching in the search box, too.

You can configure advanced search options by clicking the ellipsis (Toggle Search Details) below the search box on the right (or press ⇧⌘J (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+J)). This will show additional fields to configure the search.

Advanced search options

Advanced search options

In the two input boxes below the search box, you can enter patterns to include or exclude from the search. If you enter example, that will match every folder and file named example in the workspace. If you enter ./example, that will match the folder example/ at the top level of your workspace. Use , to separate multiple patterns. Paths must use forward slashes. You can also use glob syntax:

  • * to match zero or more characters in a path segment
  • ? to match on one character in a path segment
  • ** to match any number of path segments, including none
  • {} to group conditions (for example {**/*.html,**/*.txt} matches all HTML and text files)
  • [] to declare a range of characters to match (example.[0-9] to match on example.0, example.1, …)
  • [!...] to negate a range of characters to match (example.[!0-9] to match on example.a, example.b, but not example.0)

VS Code excludes some folders by default to reduce the number of search results that you are not interested in (for example: node_modules). Open settings to change these rules under the files.exclude and search.exclude section.

Note that glob patterns in the search view work differently than in settings such as files.exclude and search.exclude. In the settings, you must use **/example to match a folder named example in subfolder folder1/example in your workspace. In the search view, the ** prefix is assumed. The glob patterns in these settings are always evaluated relative to the path of the workspace folder.

Also note the Use Exclude Settings and Ignore Files toggle button in the files to exclude box. The toggle determines whether to exclude files that are ignored by your .gitignore files and/or matched by your files.exclude and search.exclude settings.

Tip: From the Explorer, you can right-click on a folder and select Find in Folder to search inside a folder only.

Search and replace

You can also Search and Replace across files. Expand the Search widget to display the Replace text box.

search and replace

When you type text into the Replace text box, you will see a diff display of the pending changes. You can replace across all files from the Replace text box, replace all in one file or replace a single change.

search and replace diff view

Tip: You can quickly reuse a previous search term by using (Windows, Linux Down) and (Windows, Linux Up) to navigate through your search term history.

Case changing in regex replace

VS Code supports changing the case of regex matching groups while doing Search and Replace in the editor or globally. This is done with the modifiers uUlL, where u and l will upper/lowercase a single character, and U and L will upper/lowercase the rest of the matching group.

Example:

Changing case while doing find and replace

The modifiers can also be stacked — for example, uuu$1 will uppercase the first three characters of the group, or lU$1 will lowercase the first character, and uppercase the rest. The capture group is referenced by $n in the replacement string, where n is the order of the capture group.

Search Editor

Search Editors let you view workspace search results in a full-sized editor, complete with syntax highlighting and optional lines of surrounding context.

Below is a search for the word ‘SearchEditor’ with two lines of text before and after the match for context:

Search Editor overview

The Open Search Editor command opens an existing Search Editor if one exists, or to otherwise create a new one. The New Search Editor command will always create a new Search Editor.

In the Search Editor, results can be navigated to using Go to Definition actions, such as F12 to open the source location in the current editor group, or ⌘K F12 (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K F12) to open the location in an editor to the side. Additionally, double-clicking can optionally open the source location, configurable with the search.searchEditor.doubleClickBehaviour setting.

You can also use the Open New Search Editor button at the top of the Search view, and can copy your existing results from a Search view over to a Search Editor with the Open in editor link at the top of the results tree, or the Search Editor: Open Results in Editor command.

Search Editor Button

The Search Editor above was opened by selecting the Open New Search Editor button (third button) on the top of the Search view.

Search Editor commands and arguments

  • search.action.openNewEditor — Opens the Search Editor in a new tab.
  • search.action.openInEditor — Copy the current Search results into a new Search Editor.
  • search.action.openNewEditorToSide — Opens the Search Editor in a new window next to the window you currently have opened.

There are two arguments that you can pass to the Search Editor commands (search.action.openNewEditor, search.action.openNewEditorToSide) to allow keybindings to configure how a new Search Editor should behave:

  • triggerSearch — Whether a search be automatically run when a Search Editor is opened. Default is true.
  • focusResults — Whether to put focus in the results of a search or the query input. Default is true.

For example, the following keybinding runs the search when the Search Editor is opened but leaves the focus in the search query control.

{
  "key": "ctrl+o",
  "command": "search.action.openNewEditor",
  "args": { "query": "VS Code", "triggerSearch": true, "focusResults": false }
}

Search Editor context default

The search.searchEditor.defaultNumberOfContextLines setting has a default value of 1, meaning one context line will be shown before and after each result line in the Search Editor.

Reuse last Search Editor configuration

The search.searchEditor.reusePriorSearchConfiguration setting (default is false) lets you reuse the last active Search Editor’s configuration when creating a new Search Editor.

IntelliSense

We’ll always offer word completion, but for the rich languages, such as JavaScript, JSON, HTML, CSS, SCSS, Less, C# and TypeScript, we offer a true IntelliSense experience. If a language service knows possible completions, the IntelliSense suggestions will pop up as you type. You can always manually trigger it with ⌃Space (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Space). By default, Tab or Enter are the accept keyboard triggers but you can also customize these key bindings.

Tip: The suggestions filtering supports CamelCase so you can type the letters which are upper cased in a method name to limit the suggestions. For example, «cra» will quickly bring up «createApplication».

Tip: IntelliSense suggestions can be configured via the editor.quickSuggestions and editor.suggestOnTriggerCharacters settings.

JavaScript and TypeScript developers can take advantage of the npmjs type declaration (typings) file repository to get IntelliSense for common JavaScript libraries (Node.js, React, Angular). You can find a good explanation on using type declaration files in the JavaScript language topic and the Node.js tutorial.

Learn more in the IntelliSense document.

Formatting

VS Code has great support for source code formatting. The editor has two explicit format actions:

  • Format Document (⇧⌥F (Windows Shift+Alt+F, Linux Ctrl+Shift+I)) — Format the entire active file.
  • Format Selection (⌘K ⌘F (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+F)) — Format the selected text.

You can invoke these from the Command Palette (⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P)) or the editor context menu.

VS Code has default formatters for JavaScript, TypeScript, JSON, HTML, and CSS. Each language has specific formatting options (for example, html.format.indentInnerHtml) which you can tune to your preference in your user or workspace settings. You can also disable the default language formatter if you have another extension installed that provides formatting for the same language.

"html.format.enable": false

Along with manually invoking code formatting, you can also trigger formatting based on user gestures such as typing, saving or pasting. These are off by default but you can enable these behaviors through the following settings:

  • editor.formatOnType — Format the line after typing.
  • editor.formatOnSave — Format a file on save.
  • editor.formatOnPaste — Format the pasted content.

Note: Not all formatters support format on paste as to do so they must support formatting a selection or range of text.

In addition to the default formatters, you can find extensions on the Marketplace to support other languages or formatting tools. There is a Formatters category so you can easily search and find formatting extensions. In the Extensions view search box, type ‘formatters’ or ‘category:formatters’ to see a filtered list of extensions within VS Code.

Folding

You can fold regions of source code using the folding icons on the gutter between line numbers and line start. Move the mouse over the gutter and click to fold and unfold regions. Use Shift + Click on the folding icon to fold or unfold the region and all regions inside.

Folding

You can also use the following actions:

  • Fold (⌥⌘[ (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+[)) folds the innermost uncollapsed region at the cursor.
  • Unfold (⌥⌘] (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+])) unfolds the collapsed region at the cursor.
  • Toggle Fold (⌘K ⌘L (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+L)) folds or unfolds the region at the cursor.
  • Fold Recursively (⌘K ⌘[ (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+[)) folds the innermost uncollapsed region at the cursor and all regions inside that region.
  • Unfold Recursively (⌘K ⌘] (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+])) unfolds the region at the cursor and all regions inside that region.
  • Fold All (⌘K ⌘0 (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+0)) folds all regions in the editor.
  • Unfold All (⌘K ⌘J (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+J)) unfolds all regions in the editor.
  • Fold Level X (⌘K ⌘2 (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+2) for level 2) folds all regions of level X, except the region at the current cursor position.
  • Fold All Block Comments (⌘K ⌘/ (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+/)) folds all regions that start with a block comment token.

Folding regions are by default evaluated based on the indentation of lines. A folding region starts when a line has a smaller indent than one or more following lines, and ends when there is a line with the same or smaller indent.

Folding regions can also be computed based on syntax tokens of the editor’s configured language. The following languages already provide syntax aware folding: Markdown, HTML, CSS, LESS, SCSS, and JSON.

If you prefer to switch back to indentation-based folding for one (or all) of the languages above, use:

  "[html]": {
    "editor.foldingStrategy": "indentation"
  },

Regions can also be defined by markers defined by each language. The following languages currently have markers defined:

Language Start region End region
Bat ::#region or REM #region ::#endregion or REM #endregion
C# #region #endregion
C/C++ #pragma region #pragma endregion
CSS/Less/SCSS /*#region*/ /*#endregion*/
Coffeescript #region #endregion
F# //#region or (#_region) //#endregion or (#_endregion)
Java //#region or //<editor-fold> // #endregion or //</editor-fold>
Markdown <!-- #region --> <!-- #endregion -->
Perl5 #region or =pod #endregion or =cut
PHP #region #endregion
PowerShell #region #endregion
Python #region or # region #endregion or # endregion
TypeScript/JavaScript //#region //#endregion
Visual Basic #Region #End Region

To fold and unfold only the regions defined by markers use:

  • Fold Marker Regions (⌘K ⌘8 (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+8)) folds all marker regions.
  • Unfold Marker Regions (⌘K ⌘9 (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+9)) unfolds all marker regions.

Fold selection

The command Create Manual Folding Ranges from Selection (⌘K ⌘, (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+,)) creates a folding range from the currently selected lines and collapses it. That range is called a manual folding range that goes on top of the ranges computed by folding providers.

Manual folding ranges can be removed with the command Remove Manual Folding Ranges (⌘K ⌘. (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+.)).

Manual folding ranges are especially useful for cases when there isn’t programming language support for folding.

Indentation

VS Code lets you control text indentation and whether you’d like to use spaces or tab stops. By default, VS Code inserts spaces and uses 4 spaces per Tab key. If you’d like to use another default, you can modify the editor.insertSpaces and editor.tabSize settings.

    "editor.insertSpaces": true,
    "editor.tabSize": 4,

Auto-detection

VS Code analyzes your open file and determines the indentation used in the document. The auto-detected indentation overrides your default indentation settings. The detected setting is displayed on the right side of the Status Bar:

auto detect indentation

You can click on the Status Bar indentation display to bring up a dropdown with indentation commands allowing you to change the default settings for the open file or convert between tab stops and spaces.

indentation commands

Note: VS Code auto-detection checks for indentations of 2, 4, 6 or 8 spaces. If your file uses a different number of spaces, the indentation may not be correctly detected. For example, if your convention is to indent with 3 spaces, you may want to turn off editor.detectIndentation and explicitly set the tab size to 3.

    "editor.detectIndentation": false,
    "editor.tabSize": 3,

File encoding support

Set the file encoding globally or per workspace by using the files.encoding setting in User Settings or Workspace Settings.

files.encoding setting

You can view the file encoding in the status bar.

Encoding in status bar

Click on the encoding button in the status bar to reopen or save the active file with a different encoding.

Reopen or save with a different encoding

Then choose an encoding.

Select an encoding

Next steps

You’ve covered the basic user interface — there is a lot more to VS Code. Read on to find out about:

  • Intro Video — Setup and Basics — Watch a tutorial on the basics of VS Code.
  • User/Workspace Settings — Learn how to configure VS Code to your preferences through user and workspace settings.
  • Code Navigation — Peek and Goto Definition, and more.
  • Integrated Terminal — Learn about the integrated terminal for quickly performing command-line tasks from within VS Code.
  • IntelliSense — VS Code brings smart code completions.
  • Debugging — This is where VS Code really shines.

Common questions

Is it possible to globally search and replace?

Yes, expand the Search view text box to include a replace text field. You can search and replace across all the files in your workspace. Note that if you did not open VS Code on a folder, the search will only run on the currently open files.

global search and replace

How do I turn on word wrap?

You can control word wrap through the editor.wordWrap setting. By default, editor.wordWrap is off but if you set to it to on, text will wrap on the editor’s viewport width.

    "editor.wordWrap": "on"

You can toggle word wrap for the VS Code session with ⌥Z (Windows, Linux Alt+Z).

You can also add vertical column rulers to the editor with the editor.rulers setting, which takes an array of column character positions where you’d like vertical rulers.

If you’d like to ignore line wraps when adding cursors above or below your current selection, you can pass in { "logicalLine": true } to args on the keybinding like this:

{
  "key": "shift+alt+down",
  "command": "editor.action.insertCursorBelow",
  "when": "textInputFocus",
  "args": { "logicalLine": true },
},
{
  "key": "shift+alt+up",
  "command": "editor.action.insertCursorAbove",
  "when": "textInputFocus",
  "args": { "logicalLine": true },
},

3/30/2023

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