Without having done the installation myself, is there an easy way to check (maybe from within the application) if it is VsCode or VsCodium?
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I'm trying to "reset" my VSCode configuration as it pertains to Java without having to reinstall VSCode entirely, so I am wondering how to determine which plugins were default (installed at VSCode install time) and which were installed by me?
I have tried:
Determining the date of installation of the extensions (but I can't find it).
Using some kind of sort by/show only defaults feature (doesn't seem to exist).
Why is my vscode ui being like this? I tried completely uninstalling and installing vscode but the issue remains same. 😒😔
Tried completely uninstalling and installing but issue remains same
Try to change theme color of your vsCode editor. And check that by mistake any unknown extension downloaded by you or not.
Other side there might be problem in your display of computer check that onece.
There is one way also,
You can completely delete old vscode version files.
I have created a new extension (tmlanguage) for VSCode using the Yeoman generator.
The extension where copied to users//.vscode/extensions.
This extenxion is working fine on two of my computers and one collegua's machine.
The extension is implemented, and i can see it in the extensions browser in VSCode.
When I added this for two other colleguas, the same way I did for the 3 first computers, it doesn't work. VSCode acts as if there is noe extensions to read, or does not read them at all. As if it does not check the extension folder.
I have tried to disable all extension, then enable them again, but still the same.
In the Extension browser there is no mentioning of the new extension.
Have tried restarting VSCode.
One of the machines is Win 11, but the other is Win 10. The machines that work are all Win 10, not that I think this has something to do with it.
All running latest version of VSCode.
Is there a way to force VSCode to recognize the extensions?
Have anybody experienced similar things?
Thanks to Lex Li for pointing me in the correct direction. I thought I had followed the correct way to do this, to just copy the extension to the .vscode\extensions folder, as specified in several tutorials.
But using the vsce to generate a .vsix file did work.
This is not a duplicate of How do I open multiple instances of Visual Studio Code?.
My previous question, How can I make Visual Studio Code's auto-complete suggestions appear more quickly? explains my problem.
I was using VSC with the PlatformIo plugin for embedded development for a few months with no problem. Then I started on Flutter/Dart and soon had a problem with auto-suggest being really slow.
It could be that I just loaded a duff plug-in (I am adding them back, one by one, to see if/when it "breaks"), but ... I am considering doing all development in VCS, so as to have a single IDE.
I am currently using Eclipse for C/C++ and PHP, WebStorm for AngualrJs and PyCharm for Python.
I had previously used Eclipse for everything, and had a different copy of Eclipse for each language, each with its own plugins.
Since I will be developing in 4 or 5 languages, even if I don't hit a problem as bad as I just did, adding plug-ins for that many languages into a single IDE will inevitably slow things down.
So, question: can I have multiple installs of VSC, each with its own plug-ins, and launch them separately?
I solved this problem on windows using vs code portable.
I created a folder at the root of my machine with subfolders for each language, inside each I put the vs code, then I created a data folder inside each of them so that the information was stored locally, I modified the name of the executables and added it to the path.
As an example, to access a vscode configured for python I put code-python . at the terminal.
I Have the idea watching this video, it may help you (it is in portuguese, but you can see more os less what it does).
I'm struggling to have in vs code the same behaviour of emacs. There are several extensions available notably emacs-keymap-improved, but I can't make ctrl-y work (the yank, i.e.: paste from the kill ring).
How can I debug what is going on? there are other packages that provide emacs-like keybindings and I failed with all of them as far as ctrl-y is concerned.
I also deleted my ~/.vscode directory as a way to disable all extensions and try just that one.
You might want to take another look at emacs-keymap-improved. Ctrl+y works as expected for me with VS Code 1.23.1 for Mac. If you're still having problems, note that the author recently enabled the issue tracker on the Github repo.