Related
I am used to Resharper where I can search for files, not the content, but the filename, which makes it quick to open new files.
Is this feature implemented in Visual Studio Code and is there a shortcut for it?
Using Go to File... which is under the Go menu or using keyboard shortcut:
On Windows Ctrl+p or Ctrl+e
On macOS Cmd ⌘+p
On Linux Ctrl+p or Ctrl+e
Then type the file name.
Also be sure to checkout that you can set your own keybindings and that there are cheatsheets available for Windows, macOS and Linux.
Since the 1.70.0 release in July 2022, you can find and filter in tree views such as the Find Explorer. You can press Ctrl+F inside trees to pop up the Find control.
Before the 1.70.0 release
when you click anywhere in the explorer tree, and start typing something on the keyboard, the search keyword appears in the top right corner of the screen : ("module.ts")
And when you hover over the keyword with the mouse cursor, you can click on "Enable Filter on Type" to filter tree with your search !
On OSX, for me it's cmd ⌘ + p. cmd ⌘ + e just searches within the currently opened file.
Method1
Go->Go to File OR cntrl+p
Search your file
Method2
view->command palette OR cntrl+shift+p
type "Go to file"
Search your file
Win: CTRL+P or CTRL+E
Mac: CMD+P or CMD+E
Don't want to remember another shortcut?
Open the Command Palette:
Menu: View -> Command Palette
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+Shift+P
and hit backspace to delete ">" character and then begin typing to search for files via filename. :)
Other answers don't mention this command is named workbench.action.quickOpen.
You can use this to search the Keyboard Shortcuts menu located in Preferences.
On MacOS the default keybinding is cmd ⌘ + P.
(Coming from Sublime Text, I always change this to cmd ⌘ + T)
Also works in ubuntu with Ctrl+E
You can also press F1 to open the Command Palette and then remove the > via Backspace. Now you can search for files, too.
consider you have thousand of files in vs code and you want to search for a file with particular name then
Right click VS code editor.
Select Command Palete
In the text box type the file name
The problem with Ctrl+P (or Cmd+P) is that it searches your workspace while ignoring files and folders set in the .gitignore file. To change this behavior, add "search.useIgnoreFiles": false in your settings.json file under .vscode directory.
NOTE that search.exclude and files.exclude settings will override this. So, in your settings.json file, you should comment them out or set these two settings to false as well if you want to search all the files and directories in your VS Code project. An example for settings.json where search.exclude and files.exclude are commented out for searching all the files:
{
"search.exclude": {
//"**/Lib": true,
//"**/Scripts": true
},
"files.exclude": {
//"**/Lib": true,
//"**/Scripts": true
},
"search.useIgnoreFiles": false
}
Look here for more info.
I'm using VSCode 1.12.1
OSX press : Cmd + p
If you just want to search a single file name
Just Ctrl+P, then type and choose your one
If you want to open all files whose name contains a particular string
Open search panel
Put any common words inside those files
in 'files to include', put the search string with *, e.g. *Signaller*
For filtering in the tree on keyboard typing. The feature is deprecated. No more work.
No more of this old red inflexible box:
The replacement is way better and more interesting:
Actually not really. It could have been. The new way only filters on expanded folders only. And that's a shame. Check the last session for where the development is at. And for the options we are left with.
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_70#_tree-find-control
CMD + F (mac) or CTRL + F (else) [while focused]
No settings are needed. It just works. And more elegantly (except for the problem of only filtering searching through the visible expanded directories).
And for the default mode. highlight or filter. You can change that with:
"workbench.list.defaultFindMode": "highlight"
"workbench.list.defaultFindMode": "filter"
Only the open folders and visible elements Problem and what are we at?
It's great to know about this feature. But then you'll soon encounter the limitation it has at the moment.
Filtering only through open directories. It can help great. But then we want to filter through all. And when the project is big. That becomes totally unusable.
Issues: 1, 2, 3
We can see it's added to the backlog here:
https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/116286
duplicates: 1
You may think:
Expand all
Ok what about expanding all. Then using this.
===> That would work great => But => There is no such a feature of expanding all now.
Issues: 1, 2, duplicates: 1
Some configuration
At the moment no configuration does help!
"workbench.list.keyboardNavigation": "filter"
doesn't and many others. I tried them all. For the moment!
Extension that do that probably using web view
None exists. And to be implemented one needs to figure out the indexation used by vscode. Or implement its own indexation and then fuzzy search through using indexes. Otherwise something more simple that works for no big directories. Can be built fast. [I don't have time to do it myself. Especially that this would be resolved sometime in the future and we still can work with CTRL|CMD + P]
So that to clear for you the thoughts that you may get. And save you time.
Resume
So shortly we may see the feature of filtering all in a future version of vscode as it was added to the backlog. Right now we will be waiting. And maybe long enough.
Expand all seems not to be coming at any time or any time soon.
So what now. Left with nothing? Here a WORKAROUND
The now is => use CTRL|CMD + F on visible things. or on folders. By manually expanding them.
Or use CTRL|CMD + P without closing it. By following the next rules:
To open multiple files in the same editor. Navigate up and down and for each file use Right Arrow.
When they open they will be opened beside each other. You can use CMD|CTRL + ALT + LEFT | RIGHT to navigate between tabs left and right. Faster and better with the keyboard. The last open is the one you'll be at when you close the pallet.
To open a file in a new split editor use ALT + RIGHT ARROW.
Ref: 1
For windows.
if Ctrl+p doesn't always work
use Ctrl+shift+n instead.
To search for specifil file types in visual studio code.
Type ctrl+p and then search for something like *.py.
Simple and easy
If using vscodevim extension, ctrl + p won't work so I saw another answer using:
ctrl + shift + p
which opens the command palette. Hit backspace to remove the '>' and then start typing your filename.
Check your settings for 'Use Ignore Files' and 'Use Global Ignore Files'.
If these are checked, VSCode won't search any folders listed in .gitignore or .ignore
With VSCode 1.75 (Jan 2023), you will have a new file filter option: a 'Fuzzy Match' toggle.
That comes from issue 116286: Tree: Support continuous find
In a list of files I can filter them by start typing the name of the file. It is a super useful feature when you have hundreds+ files.
My issue is that the filter is trying to find the letters in the whole file name.
Here is an example search for word "file":
this-is-**file**-i-looked-for.jpeg (I expect this to be returned)
**f**or-th**i**s-**l**.jp**e**g (This should not be returned, it is only a random match)
Would it be possible to add there extra settings to only returns full strings matches? Or is there some setting already buried somewhere?
Solution: adding a 'Fuzzy Match' toggle button to the tree find widget.
New options:
defaultFindMatchTypeSettingKey.fuzzy: Use fuzzy matching when searching.
defaultFindMatchTypeSettingKey.contiguous': Use contiguous matching when searching.
I ended up installing the extension File Name Search. It displays in the side navigation bar all files that match a name part, so I can open them one by one to check them or process them.
Ctrl + p: we have to repeat the search for each file
Ctrl + f in the
explorer: it does not search, it just filters files in epanded
folders
Here is a demo of a search in explorer followed by a search in the Filename search extension:
Say you are editing code in one IDE and want to open the same file and place the caret at the same place in the other IDE. How would you do that between Pycharm and VSCode?
Is there a pair of extensions for that? Or a standard way of noting said place so that you can copy it from one IDE and paste it into the other?
I've looked around but couldn't find any info (maybe I didn't hit the right keywords).
Okay, so I found an answer for the direction Pycharm -> VSCode:
In Pycharm:
Hit Edit > Copy Path/Reference > Path With Line Number.
You should get a path of the form path/to/file:lineNumber.
In VSCode:
Hit Ctrl + P (command palette) > Ctrl + V (paste) > Enter.
I haven't looked for the other way around (VSCode -> Pycharm), yet.
Is it true that we cannot open two folders simultaneously on VS Code ?
As per my observation suppose I have two folder namely f1 and f2.
When I open f1 and then if I want to open f2 then it automatically closes folder f1.
So, is this problem can be fixed ? or is it default in VS code ?
What I am looking for is a way to do the following in Visual Studio Code:
Go to Definition on a symbol (which often opens a new file in the same editor group)
Open this newly opened file in a editor group next to current
... and switch back to the original file
Is there a command / key binding that would let me do 2nd bullet item?
Short Answer
Ctrl + Alt + → does that on Windows.
Details
This is my normal flow:
F12 to go to a symbol definition.
Ctrl + Alt + → to open the file on the right.
On Linux or iOS
Find the equivalent shortcut by opening File > Preferences > Keyboard Shortcuts (or running Open Keyboard Shortcuts in the command palette), and searching for these two commands:
workbench.action.moveEditorToNextGroup
workbench.action.moveEditorToPreviousGroup
If you are here, like me, looking for a way to open files in the next group, by Ctrl + Click.
Then adding Alt to the combination may do the trick. My VSCode version is 1.60.
!IMPORTANT: The new tab opened via Ctrl + Alt + Click, will always be to the right of the current. So, if you have already opened two groups, then move the tab to the left to have new tabs at the right, otherwise it will create third group.
in mac os you can use this key binding cmd + \
in windows you can use this key binding CTRL + \
I'm pretty sure what you're looking for is a combination of the answers above. I find this works:
Ctrl + \ View: Split Editor
Ctrl + Alt + → View: Move Editor into Next Group
Equivalently
(no default keybinding) View: Split Editor into Right Group
Caveat: if the file is already open in the other editor group, then it will be opened (not "cloned"). There may be a configuration setting to alter this behavior, but I couldn't find one quickly.
The result looks as follows. Suppose you are in some file on the left, and there is another editor group on the right (e.g. after executing Ctrl + \). After running the two commands above, then the currently open file will still be open on the left, but will also be open in the editor group on the right.
Tip: if you don't feel like assigning a keybinding, but would like to access the command (relatively) quickly, just type
Ctrl + Shift + P srg
I am used to Resharper where I can search for files, not the content, but the filename, which makes it quick to open new files.
Is this feature implemented in Visual Studio Code and is there a shortcut for it?
Using Go to File... which is under the Go menu or using keyboard shortcut:
On Windows Ctrl+p or Ctrl+e
On macOS Cmd ⌘+p
On Linux Ctrl+p or Ctrl+e
Then type the file name.
Also be sure to checkout that you can set your own keybindings and that there are cheatsheets available for Windows, macOS and Linux.
Since the 1.70.0 release in July 2022, you can find and filter in tree views such as the Find Explorer. You can press Ctrl+F inside trees to pop up the Find control.
Before the 1.70.0 release
when you click anywhere in the explorer tree, and start typing something on the keyboard, the search keyword appears in the top right corner of the screen : ("module.ts")
And when you hover over the keyword with the mouse cursor, you can click on "Enable Filter on Type" to filter tree with your search !
On OSX, for me it's cmd ⌘ + p. cmd ⌘ + e just searches within the currently opened file.
Method1
Go->Go to File OR cntrl+p
Search your file
Method2
view->command palette OR cntrl+shift+p
type "Go to file"
Search your file
Win: CTRL+P or CTRL+E
Mac: CMD+P or CMD+E
Don't want to remember another shortcut?
Open the Command Palette:
Menu: View -> Command Palette
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+Shift+P
and hit backspace to delete ">" character and then begin typing to search for files via filename. :)
Other answers don't mention this command is named workbench.action.quickOpen.
You can use this to search the Keyboard Shortcuts menu located in Preferences.
On MacOS the default keybinding is cmd ⌘ + P.
(Coming from Sublime Text, I always change this to cmd ⌘ + T)
Also works in ubuntu with Ctrl+E
You can also press F1 to open the Command Palette and then remove the > via Backspace. Now you can search for files, too.
consider you have thousand of files in vs code and you want to search for a file with particular name then
Right click VS code editor.
Select Command Palete
In the text box type the file name
The problem with Ctrl+P (or Cmd+P) is that it searches your workspace while ignoring files and folders set in the .gitignore file. To change this behavior, add "search.useIgnoreFiles": false in your settings.json file under .vscode directory.
NOTE that search.exclude and files.exclude settings will override this. So, in your settings.json file, you should comment them out or set these two settings to false as well if you want to search all the files and directories in your VS Code project. An example for settings.json where search.exclude and files.exclude are commented out for searching all the files:
{
"search.exclude": {
//"**/Lib": true,
//"**/Scripts": true
},
"files.exclude": {
//"**/Lib": true,
//"**/Scripts": true
},
"search.useIgnoreFiles": false
}
Look here for more info.
I'm using VSCode 1.12.1
OSX press : Cmd + p
If you just want to search a single file name
Just Ctrl+P, then type and choose your one
If you want to open all files whose name contains a particular string
Open search panel
Put any common words inside those files
in 'files to include', put the search string with *, e.g. *Signaller*
For filtering in the tree on keyboard typing. The feature is deprecated. No more work.
No more of this old red inflexible box:
The replacement is way better and more interesting:
Actually not really. It could have been. The new way only filters on expanded folders only. And that's a shame. Check the last session for where the development is at. And for the options we are left with.
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_70#_tree-find-control
CMD + F (mac) or CTRL + F (else) [while focused]
No settings are needed. It just works. And more elegantly (except for the problem of only filtering searching through the visible expanded directories).
And for the default mode. highlight or filter. You can change that with:
"workbench.list.defaultFindMode": "highlight"
"workbench.list.defaultFindMode": "filter"
Only the open folders and visible elements Problem and what are we at?
It's great to know about this feature. But then you'll soon encounter the limitation it has at the moment.
Filtering only through open directories. It can help great. But then we want to filter through all. And when the project is big. That becomes totally unusable.
Issues: 1, 2, 3
We can see it's added to the backlog here:
https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/116286
duplicates: 1
You may think:
Expand all
Ok what about expanding all. Then using this.
===> That would work great => But => There is no such a feature of expanding all now.
Issues: 1, 2, duplicates: 1
Some configuration
At the moment no configuration does help!
"workbench.list.keyboardNavigation": "filter"
doesn't and many others. I tried them all. For the moment!
Extension that do that probably using web view
None exists. And to be implemented one needs to figure out the indexation used by vscode. Or implement its own indexation and then fuzzy search through using indexes. Otherwise something more simple that works for no big directories. Can be built fast. [I don't have time to do it myself. Especially that this would be resolved sometime in the future and we still can work with CTRL|CMD + P]
So that to clear for you the thoughts that you may get. And save you time.
Resume
So shortly we may see the feature of filtering all in a future version of vscode as it was added to the backlog. Right now we will be waiting. And maybe long enough.
Expand all seems not to be coming at any time or any time soon.
So what now. Left with nothing? Here a WORKAROUND
The now is => use CTRL|CMD + F on visible things. or on folders. By manually expanding them.
Or use CTRL|CMD + P without closing it. By following the next rules:
To open multiple files in the same editor. Navigate up and down and for each file use Right Arrow.
When they open they will be opened beside each other. You can use CMD|CTRL + ALT + LEFT | RIGHT to navigate between tabs left and right. Faster and better with the keyboard. The last open is the one you'll be at when you close the pallet.
To open a file in a new split editor use ALT + RIGHT ARROW.
Ref: 1
For windows.
if Ctrl+p doesn't always work
use Ctrl+shift+n instead.
To search for specifil file types in visual studio code.
Type ctrl+p and then search for something like *.py.
Simple and easy
If using vscodevim extension, ctrl + p won't work so I saw another answer using:
ctrl + shift + p
which opens the command palette. Hit backspace to remove the '>' and then start typing your filename.
Check your settings for 'Use Ignore Files' and 'Use Global Ignore Files'.
If these are checked, VSCode won't search any folders listed in .gitignore or .ignore
With VSCode 1.75 (Jan 2023), you will have a new file filter option: a 'Fuzzy Match' toggle.
That comes from issue 116286: Tree: Support continuous find
In a list of files I can filter them by start typing the name of the file. It is a super useful feature when you have hundreds+ files.
My issue is that the filter is trying to find the letters in the whole file name.
Here is an example search for word "file":
this-is-**file**-i-looked-for.jpeg (I expect this to be returned)
**f**or-th**i**s-**l**.jp**e**g (This should not be returned, it is only a random match)
Would it be possible to add there extra settings to only returns full strings matches? Or is there some setting already buried somewhere?
Solution: adding a 'Fuzzy Match' toggle button to the tree find widget.
New options:
defaultFindMatchTypeSettingKey.fuzzy: Use fuzzy matching when searching.
defaultFindMatchTypeSettingKey.contiguous': Use contiguous matching when searching.
I ended up installing the extension File Name Search. It displays in the side navigation bar all files that match a name part, so I can open them one by one to check them or process them.
Ctrl + p: we have to repeat the search for each file
Ctrl + f in the
explorer: it does not search, it just filters files in epanded
folders
Here is a demo of a search in explorer followed by a search in the Filename search extension: