The docs mention an executable called code
, but I'm not sure where I can find that so I can put it on my path. The zip I downloaded from the VSCode site did not include any such executable. (I am able to run the .app
just fine.)
Is this a Windows-only thing?
cmd+shift+P
): Type shell command to find Shell Command: Install 'code' command in PATH command
From the Visual Studio Code Setup page:
Tip: If you want to run VS Code from the terminal by simply typing 'code', VS Code has a command, Shell Command: Install 'code' command in PATH, to add 'code' to your $PATH variable list. After installation, launch VS Code. Now open the Command Palette (F1 or ⇧+⌘+P on Mac) and type shell command to find the Shell Command: Install 'code' command in PATH command. After executing the command, restart the terminal for the new $PATH value to take effect. You'll be able to simply type 'code .' in any folder to start editing files in that folder.
⚡️ The Easy Solution.
Download, install and open Visual Studio Code. Open the Command Palette (⌘ + ⇧ + P on Mac) OR View ❯ Command Palette
🌟 3. Type shell command to find Shell Command: Install 'code' command in PATH command
Install it and you're done
📟 Here's a complimentary GIF.
https://i.stack.imgur.com/CZJGA.gif
After that, you can use code
or code .
in the terminal.
code
Peace! ✌️
If you'd like to go a little bit further and learn a couple of great tips/tricks for using the VSCode CLI, I made a YouTube video on my workflows.
If you want to open a file or folder on Visual Studio Code from your terminal
, iTerm
, etc below are the commands which come as default when you install Visual Studio Code
To open Visual Studio Code from command line
code --
To open the entire folder/directory
code .
To open a specific file
code file_name
eg:- code index.html
We since updated the script to the following syntax to support multiple files and folders as arguments and to fix an issue with not detecting the current working directory properly:
code () { VSCODE_CWD="$PWD" open -n -b "com.microsoft.VSCode" --args $* }
Update for our VS Code 1.0 release:
Please use the command Install 'Code' command in path
or Install 'code-insiders' command in path
from the command palette (View | Command Palette
) to make Code available to the command line.
sudo code
. I'm using VSCode to work on some NPM modules and need sudo to overwrite.
For me on Macbook Book Pro 2019 MacOS version 10.15.6, shortcut to open command palette in VSCode was Shift
+ Command
+ P
.
On opening it one has to just write install code
and press enter
.
https://i.stack.imgur.com/YGJWj.png
After that just open the terminal and type code
your vscode will start opening.
This was the tutorial I was looking for in this thread. It shows the way to open files in Visual Studio Code by writing code .
1.- Open the file
Bash
open ~/.bash_profile
Terminal OS
open ~/.zshrc
2.- Add in your file the :
code () { VSCODE_CWD="$PWD" open -n -b "com.microsoft.VSCode" --args $* ;}
3.- Reinicialize terminal and try in the folder you want to open
code .
4.- Then you can use it as shown in this comment: https://stackoverflow.com/a/41821250/10033560
I have a ~/bin/code
shell script that matches the command @BengaminPasero wrote.
#!/bin/bash
VSCODE_CWD="$PWD" open -n -b "com.microsoft.VSCode" --args $*
I prefix ~/bin:
to my $PATH
which allows me to add a bunch of one off scripts without polluting my ~/.bash_profile
script.
function code { VSCODE_CWD="$PWD" open -n -b "com.microsoft.VSCode" --args $* }
Note: Only for Windows Users.
As many folks already suggested ways to open code from command prompt using code .
command. This will only open Visual Studio Code Stable build. But If you have downloaded Visual Studio Code Insider build/version (Which has all latest build/features but unstable version) then you need to follow below instructions in windows :
Go to Control Panel\System and Security\System. Click on Advanced System Settings
Click on Environment Variables
Under System Variables tab, Click on Edit for Path Variable
Add a new path C:\Users\tsabu\AppData\Local\Programs\Microsoft VS Code Insiders\bin (or) C:\Program Files\Microsoft VS Code Insiders\bin based on location at which you have installed vscode insider in your machine. Open a new command prompt and type code-insiders . to open vscode-insider build/version
After opening VSC and pressing (Command + Up + P) I tried typing in "shell command" and nothing came up. In order to get "Shell Command: Install 'code' command in PATH command" to come up, you must do the following:
Press (Command, Up, P) Type > (this will show and run commands) Then type Shell Command: Install 'code' command in PATH command. It should then come up. Once you click it, it will update and you should be good to go!
MacOS X Launch from Command Line docs
On OSX Mavericks I created a bash script named vscode
(adapted from the .bashrc
in VSCode Setup) in ~/bin
:
#!/bin/bash
if [[ $# = 0 ]]
then
open -a "Visual Studio Code"
else
[[ $1 = /* ]] && F="$1" || F="$PWD/${1#./}"
open -a "Visual Studio Code" --args "$F"
fi
vscode <file or directory>
now works as expected.
https://i.stack.imgur.com/Vumsf.png
If you are using VS Code Insiders:
code-insiders .
If you are using VS Code:
code .
Try this one
Open Visual Studio Code and press Command + Shift + P then type Shell in command palette now you are able to find this option like Shell Command : Install code in PATH from suggested list in command palette. Select that options.
Open VSCode via Terminal/Command Prompt
That's it.
Now open your terminal type.
$ code .
I discovered a neat workaround for mingw32 (i.e. for those of you using the version of bash which is installed by git-scm.com on windows):
code () { VSCODE_CWD="$PWD" cmd //c code $* ;}
cd /c/some/path
and then code .
If you want it to be set automatically every time then you run git bash then add it to your ~/.bash_profile
You can use the vscode:
protocol that Visual Studio Code defines:
open vscode://file/full/path/to/project/or/file
You can also use
/Applications/Visual\ Studio\ Code.app/Contents/Resources/app/bin/code
if you do not fancy modifying your path
its very simple:
Launching from the Command Line
You can also run VS Code from the terminal by typing 'code' after adding it to the path:
Launch VS Code. Open the Command Palette (⇧⌘P) and type 'shell command' to find the Shell Command: Install 'code' command in PATH command.
source
https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/setup/mac
I ran: open -a "Visual Studio Code" [folder-name]
to open a folder with my Visual Studio Code application. Folder name is optional if you just want to open the application. Not sure if this is exactly your use-case, but hope this helps!
This is what worked for me on Mac OS Catalina -- found here (thanks, Josiah!)
If you're on Mac OS Catalina, you need to edit your .zprofile instead of .bash_profile.
Edit your ~/.zprofile file: vim ~/.zprofile Add the following code in it, on it's own line: code () { VSCODE_CWD="$PWD" open -n -b "com.microsoft.VSCode" --args $* ;} Save the file: :wq Re-run the updated file: source ~/.zprofile. Test that running code . opens your current folder in VS Code!
In my case I had to use an alias:
alias code="/<PATH TO VSCODE>/Visual\ Studio\ Code.app/Contents/Resources/app/bin/code"
You can add this alias in your ~/.bash_profile
.
I added this to my ~/.profile
alias vscode='/Applications/Visual\ Studio\ Code.app/Contents/MacOS/Electron'
then
. ~/.profile
afterwards I can just do
vscode
from the terminal
Added this to /usr/local/bin/code, you might have to modify the path if they are different.
#!/usr/bin/env bash
CONTENTS="/Applications/Visual Studio Code.app/Contents"
ELECTRON="$CONTENTS/MacOS/Electron"
CLI="$CONTENTS/Resources/app/out/cli.js"
ATOM_SHELL_INTERNAL_RUN_AS_NODE=1 "$ELECTRON" "$CLI" "$@"
exit $?
Make executable afterwards
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/code
$CONTENTS/Resources/app/out/cli.js
itself. I removed the references to CLI and it behaves as expected.
I had this issue because of VS Code Insiders. The path variable was there but I needed to rename the code-insiders.cmd inside to code.cmd .
Maybe this is useful to someone.
For windows Users just type in
>code .
More commands here https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/editor/command-line
If you're using visual code insiders
and you want to open a file or folder in Visual Studio Code insider
s from your terminal or any other command line tool then you can refer to the commands below which come by default inside visual studio code insider
.
To open Visual Studio Code from command line
code-insiders --
To open the entire folder/directory
code-insiders .
To open a specific file
code-insiders file_name
eg:- code index.html
VSCode now supports it out of the box with version 1.58. Just type:
$ cd path/to/your/directory
$ code .
The instruction given at VS Code Command Line for launching a path are incorrect; the leading colon shown in the example doesn't work. However, launching with a backslash terminated directory name opens the specified directory as expected.
So, for example,
code C:\Users\DAVE\Documents\Programming\Angular\StringCalculator\src\
opens the Visual Studio Code editor in directory C:\Users\DAVE\Documents\Programming\Angular\StringCalculator\src
.
Important: The terminal backslash, though optional, is useful, as it makes clear that the intend is to open a directory, as opposed to a file. Bear in mind that file name extensions are, and always have been, optional.
Beware: The directory that gets appended to the PATH list is the \bin
directory, and the shell command code
launches a Windows NT Command script.
Hence, when incorporated into another shell script, code
must be called or started if you expect the remainder of the script to run. Thankfully, I discovered this before my first test of a new shell script that I am creating to start an Angular 2 project in a local Web server, my default Web browser, and Visual Studio Code, all at once.
Following is my Angular startup script, adapted to eliminate a dependency on one of my system utilities that is published elsewhere, but not strictly required.
@echo off
goto SKIPREM
=========================================================================
Name: StartAngularApp.CMD
Synopsis: Start the Angular 2 application installed in a specified
directory.
Arguments: %1 = OPTIONAL: Name of directory in which to application
is installed
Remarks: If no argument is specified, the application must be in
the current working directory.
This is a completely generalized Windows NT command
script (shell script) that uses the NPM Angular CLI to
load an Angular 2 application into a Node development
Web server, the default Web browser, and the Visual
Studio Code text editor.
Dependencies: Unless otherwise specified in the command line, the
application is created in the current working directory.
All of the following shell scripts and programs must be
installed in a directory that is on the Windows PATH
directory list.
1) ShowTime.CMD
2) WWPause.exe
3) WWSleep.exe
4) npm (the Node Package Manager) and its startup
script, npm.cmd, must be accessible via the Windows
PATH environment string. By default, this goes into
directory C:\Program Files\nodejs.
5) The Angular 2 startup script, ng.cmd, and the Node
Modules library must be installed for global access.
By default, these go into directory %AppData%\npm.
Author: David A. Gray
Created: Monday, 23 April 2017
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Revision History
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date By Synopsis
---------- --- --------------------------------------------------------
2017/04/23 DAG Script created, tested, and deployed.
=======================================================================
:SKIPREM
echo BOJ %~0, version %~t0
echo.
echo -------------------------------------------------------
echo Displaying the current node.js version:
echo -------------------------------------------------------
echo.
node -v
echo.
echo -------------------------------------------------------
echo Displaying the current Node Package Manager version:
echo -------------------------------------------------------
echo.
call npm -v
echo.
echo -------------------------------------------------------
echo Loading Angular starter application %1
echo into a local Web server, the default Web browser, and
echo the Visual Studio Code text editor.
echo -------------------------------------------------------
echo.
if "%1" neq "" (
echo.
echo -------------------------------------------------------
echo Starting the Angular application in directory %1
echo -------------------------------------------------------
echo.
cd "%~1"
call code %1\src\
) else (
echo.
echo -------------------------------------------------------
echo Starting the Angular application in directory %CD%
echo -------------------------------------------------------
echo.
call code %CD%\src\
)
call ng serve --open
echo.
echo -------------------------------------------------------
echo %~nx0 Done!
echo -------------------------------------------------------
echo.
Pause
$> open -a "Visual Studio Code" [file-name]
link your currentily folders to vscode.
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
; Directory\Background\shell => on empty space
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\Background\shell\vscode]
"Icon"="C:\\current-folder-vscode\\Code.exe,0"
@="VsCode"
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\Background\shell\vscode\command]
@="C:\\current-folder-vscode\\Code.exe ."
; Directory\shell => on a folder
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\shell\vscode]
@="VsCode"
"Icon"="C:\\current-folder-vscode\\Code.exe,0"
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\shell\vscode\command]
@="C:\\current-folder-vscode\\Code.exe ."
If you install VS CODE using snap
. You will need to add /snap/bin
in your PATH environment variable. so - open your .bashrc
or .zshrc
and add /snap/bin
in your PATH environment variable
reload terminal, and than code
comand will start it
For Windows you can use Command:
start Code filename.extension
The above line works for me.
Success story sharing
code -r <filename>
. Normally, that is what you want.code
command fails to launch Visual Studio Code after I restart my laptop./usr/local/bin/code
which links to an executable in a temporary directory under/private/var/folders
. After restarting my computer, that directory is deleted so the symlink goes away. I made a more persistent symlink with:sudo ln -s /Applications/Visual\ Studio\ Code.app/Contents/Resources/app/bin/code /usr/local/bin/code
. Assuming/usr/local/bin
is in yourPATH
this will survive a restart.