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https://www.linkedin.com/legal/privacy/eu | European Regional Hub Skip to main content Privacy Privacy Settings Privacy FAQs Regional Info California Privacy Disclosure EU Notice Japan Republic of Korea LGPD Quebec Singapore U.S. State Laws Privacy Policy Privacy Settings Privacy FAQs Regional Info California Privacy Disclosure EU Notice Japan Republic of Korea LGPD Quebec Singapore U.S. State Laws Privacy Policy LinkedIn European Regional Privacy Notice On November 3, 2025, we updated this notice to provide information about our reliance on Legitimate Interests as the legal basis for training content-generating AI models used in our products. You can opt out any time in your settings if you’d prefer not to have your data used in this way Effective November 3, 2025 This European Regional Privacy Notice (this “Notice”) supplements LinkedIn’s Privacy Policy and contains additional information for Members and Visitors located in the Designated Countries (as defined in the Introduction to the Privacy Policy ) and the United Kingdom. If there is a discrepancy between the Privacy Policy and this Notice, the information in this Notice will apply to you. Unless otherwise indicated below, the information in this Notice applies to members in both the Designated Countries and the UK. Data Controller As set out in our Privacy Policy , if you are located in the Designated Countries, LinkedIn Ireland Unlimited Company with its address at Wilton Place, Dublin 2, Ireland, is the data controller of your personal data. If you are located in the United Kingdom, LinkedIn Corporation with its address at 1000 W Maude Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA, is the data controller of your personal data. When we refer to “ LinkedIn” in this Notice we mean LinkedIn Ireland Unlimited Company or LinkedIn Corporation, as it applies to you. Legal bases for processing your personal data LinkedIn only processes your personal data when we have a legal basis. We set out in this section each of the legal bases we rely on, why and how we use your data, and the categories of personal data we process. To perform our contract with you LinkedIn processes personal data when it is necessary to perform our contract (the User Agreement ) with our Members. Where we need your personal data to perform a contract with you and you do not provide the data, we will not be able to enter into the contract, or we may have to suspend or cancel any existing contract we have with you. Why and how we use your data Data we use To allow Members to register for and manage access to their LinkedIn account, to view the LinkedIn platform in their preferred language, and to receive the core Services under our User Agreement. Your account information: your name, email address, login and two-step verification information, payment information (for paid Services), subscription information, and Member-chosen language. Data relating to your use of our Services: IP address, device ID, user agent, location data, browser type and version, operating system and platform, and other online identifiers collected from Cookies and other similar technologies. Consent We may process your personal data with your consent. You can withdraw your consent by using your Member settings or by contacting us . LinkedIn processes personal data when Members give us consent, such as via their Account and Privacy Settings , by agreeing to our terms, and through in-product experiences. Where we rely on consent, you can withdraw your consent at any time, however this will not affect our use of your data up to that point. Why and how we use your data Data we use So Members can add information to their profiles and display it to their connections, network and Visitors on LinkedIn, and display it off LinkedIn on their publicly-visible profile and in the applications of Affiliates , partners, customers and developers. Data that you or others provide in your LinkedIn profile: your name, photo, current position, education, location, skills, endorsements, recommendations, and contact details To enable two-factor authentication for Members to protect their LinkedIn accounts, or recover access to their LinkedIn accounts. Two-factor verification information (e.g., phone number) To allow Members to make and accept new connections. Connect functionality on Member profiles Contact information (email, telephone, etc.) So Members can show their profile alongside information about their company or institution, or their stated interests on LinkedIn. Data that you or others provide in your LinkedIn profile : your name, photo, current position, education, location, skills, endorsements, recommendations, and contact details So that Members can verify certain information about themselves, to include a verification and related information on their profile and elsewhere where their profile information appears, and, depending on the verification method, to receive and store verification data, and to use it for security purposes. Verification data (work or educational institution email address, profile verification badge and information, Member ID, hashed unique identifier, country of issuance for government IDs used to obtain verification badge via our verification partner) Name So Members can interact with our platform functionality, features and tools, such as certain tools and solutions that leverage AI. Member inputted information (e.g., learning goals, topics of interest, uploaded CVs) Publicly-viewable information on Members Data that you or others provide in your LinkedIn profile: your name, photo, current position, education, location, skills, endorsements, recommendations, and contact details For LinkedIn or third parties to send Members marketing communications (e.g., emails or SMS messages) in order to market products, services and events. Contact details (e.g., email address, phone number, InMail handle), location and current position Other data submitted through Lead Generation Forms (e.g. name, company, answers to custom questions) To enable Members to discover, signal interest in and apply for jobs and opportunities on LinkedIn; and to enable Members to be discovered by hirers for job and opportunities. Location Job search filters (e.g. industry, experience level, job type, remote status, salary, benefits etc.) Job preferences (as set by Members), including "Open to Work" Uploaded CVs Member profile information submitted by Members as part of a job application Job account information For LinkedIn to use non-essential cookies and similar tracking technologies to identify Members, to deliver ads, and to conduct analytics related to user interaction with LinkedIn pages, advertising and research purposes. Data relating to your use of our Services: IP address, device ID, user agent, location data, browser type and version, operating system and platform, and other online identifiers collected from Cookies and similar technologies For Personalised Ads in the Designated Countries: 1. To display, measure, and improve certain personalised (not contextual) ads on and off LinkedIn that are relevant to your interests, based on certain data we observe or infer about you from use of our Services. 2. To target, measure, and improve certain personalised (not contextual) ads on and off LinkedIn based on data we obtain from third parties 1. LinkedIn Data Inferred City, Country and Continent Location (from your IP address) Inferred Gender Inferred Age Range Your activity data : This is data that we observe over time about your engagement with our Services, such as company page visits, videos you watch, actions you take on ads (views and clicks) and your participation in events on LinkedIn. Inferred Interests (e.g. your general, product and service interests) and Traits (e.g. that you are an expat, frequent traveler, job seeker) based on your LinkedIn profile and activity on LinkedIn Data relating to your use of our Services: IP address, device ID, user agent, location data, browser type and version, operating system and platform, and other online identifiers collected from Cookies and similar technologies 2. Off-LinkedIn Data Ad Partners Data for Ads off LinkedIn and ad measurement: IP addresses, cookies, as ID, other online identifiers, views and clicks Advertiser Data for Ads: contact information (hashed email, name, ad ID), device information, visits, views and clicks. Advertiser Data to Measure Ad Success: Visits, sign-ups, purchases. Data relating to your use of third party services: IP address, device ID, user agent, location data, browser type and version, operating system and platform, and other online identifiers collected from Cookies and similar technologies that customers share with LinkedIn You can learn more about how LinkedIn uses data from others for ads. You can amend your settings at any time and learn more about adjusting your settings . You can learn more about the ad technologies we use, our advertising services and our advertising partners. For Personalised Ads in the UK: For LinkedIn and its customers to use data we receive form third parties to display personalised advertisements to Members and Visitors Information from advertising partners , vendors and publishers (e.g., LinkedIn advertiser customers who install a LinkedIn tag on their websites) Learn more about the ad technologies we use, our advertising services and our advertising partners You can control how we use your personal data for this type of advertising here . To tailor, measure and optimise ads when you choose to submit a Lead Generation Form or take part in a brand lift survey through our Services Contact details (e.g., email address, first and last name, LinkedIn profile URL), and current position, company name, company size and industry Other data submitted through Lead Generation Forms or surveys (e.g., name, company, answers to custom questions) To perform analytics to provide aggregated workforce and salary insights to Members, customers and others based on Member-provided data. Member provided demographic data (e.g. disability and gender) Legitimate Interest Where we rely on legitimate interests we balance the interests the processing supports against your rights and freedoms before processing your personal data, and you have the right to object or to ask for restriction of our processing we describe in this notice at any time. When does LinkedIn rely on legitimate interests? In some cases, the collection and processing of your personal data is based on our legitimate interests and/or the legitimate interests of third parties (e.g., LinkedIn customers and our Members), provided that our interest in processing does not outweigh your interests or fundamental rights and freedoms. These interests include commercial interests, the interests of our Members and broader societal benefits. In each instance, we have considered whether these interests are outweighed by your rights and freedoms, and have concluded, based on the limited impact of the processing, the strong safeguards we apply, and the controls we offer you over your data, that we can proceed with the processing. If you have questions about how LinkedIn processes your personal data, you can view our Privacy Policy , the many articles and resources on our Help Centre or you can Contact us . How we use your data Legitimate interests relied on Personal data used Safety and security: To help protect you, us, or others from threats, we log users' activity on LinkedIn to identify and investigate harmful or fraudulent behaviour that violates our User Agreement . Examples of the behaviour include: security threats, hacks, scraping, fake accounts and information, bots, malicious actors, or fraud. To verify certain information you have provided e.g. your workplace, educational institution or your identity. To share data with our Affiliates including our parent company, Microsoft, for security purposes, to prevent, detect investigate and address possible fraud or harmful behaviour or other violations of the law or our User Agreement, attempts to harm our Members, Visitors, our Affiliates or others, and to protect the security and integrity of our site. To share data with other organisations for security purposes to prevent, detect, investigate and address threats, harmful behaviour, possible fraud or other violations of the law. To use automated systems such as generative AI to detect and prevent harmful content on your feed and in messages , and train and improve our AI systems for these trust and security-related purposes. To verify your account following account restriction or closure for breaches of our User Agreement. To improve the safety, security, authenticity of our Services. To better protect the personal data of our Members and Visitors. To detect, investigate and address threats, bad actors and malicious activity on LinkedIn. So that our Affiliates, including our parent company, Microsoft, can detect, investigate and address threats, possible fraud, bad actors, harmful behaviour and malicious activity against LinkedIn, Microsoft, our Affiliates, and others. So that LinkedIn and other organisations can detect, investigate and address threats, possible fraud, bad actors and malicious activity online. Data relating to your use of our Services: IP address, device ID, user agent, location data, browser type and version, operating system and platform, and other online identifiers collected from Cookies and other similar technologies Your account information: your email address, login and two-step verification information, payment and subscription information Data that you or others provide in your LinkedIn profile: your name, photo, current position, education, location, skills, endorsements, recommendations, and contact details Your activity data : This is data that you or others provide in posts, comments, articles, or other content on our Services including search history, feed, content you read, content you share, who you follow or is following you, connections, participation, page visits, videos you watch, actions you take on ads (views and clicks) and your job searches Data that you provide when you contact us or request support via email, our ticket system or live chat. This may include your name, email address, LinkedIn account details, phone number, payment information and the details of your query or issue Inferences we make about you Your connections and group memberships Reports from you, or reports that others make about you relating to possible violations of LinkedIn's User Agreement or Professional Community Policies Your verification badge and verification information when you have verified certain information on the platform Where permitted, Government ID and other personal identification documentation for account recovery purposes Business administration : To enable or administer our business, such as for quality control, preparing consolidated reports on our business, and customer service. To manage corporate transactions, such as mergers, acquisitions or sales. To monitor the use of our Member and customer service offerings and perform analytics to produce reports on the effectiveness of our Member and Customer support services. To perform analytics to produce reports and metrics on how our Services are used to help evaluate product performance, fix issues, improve and deliver our Services. To understand and improve our business or customer relationships generally. To make business and financial projections. To Transfer Member and Customer data to be processed and stored on LinkedIn Corporation's data centres in the US. To create reports and metrics based on your use of our products, such as interactions with ads, to enable us to invoice our customers for our products and services, and to understand usage of our Services. To run our business efficiently and effectively. To comply with laws regarding business operations, consumer protection and tax compliance. To fulfil the expectations of our Members, Visitors, and customers about the high quality of our Services. To enhance, grow, strengthen and otherwise manage our business and assets. To meet the needs of our Visitors, Members and Customers, and better ensure that our Members, customers and Visitors receive quality services from LinkedIn. Data relating to your use of our Services: IP address, device ID, user agent, location data, browser type and version, operating system and platform, and other online identifiers collected from Cookies and other similar technologies Your account information including payment and subscription information Data that you provide when you contact us or request support via email, our ticket system or live chat. This may include your name, email address, LinkedIn account details, phone number, payment information and the details of your query or issue Information received by post at any of our LinkedIn offices worldwide Data that you or others provide in your LinkedIn profile: your name, photo, current position, education, location, skills, endorsements, recommendations, and contact details Your activity data : This is data that you or others provide in posts, comments, articles, or other content on our Services including search history, feed, content you read, content you share, who you follow or is following you, connections, participation, page visits, videos you watch, actions you take on ads (views and clicks) and your job searches Your connections and group memberships Inferences we make about you Personal demographic data Reports from you, or reports that others make about you relating to possible violations of LinkedIn's User Agreement or Professional Community Policies Data about your use of some of the other services provided by us or our Affiliates, including Microsoft Personalising your LinkedIn experience: To perform analytics (excluding for personalised ads purposes) and to personalise content and recommendations LinkedIn uses information you've provided, and information inferred from you and your network to personalise content and recommendations. LinkedIn may use profiling techniques to achieve these purposes. These include seeing posts and people that we think might interest you on your LinkedIn feed. To make suggestions for how you can expand your network by recommending connections , groups and topics you may like to follow or contribute to. To recommend jobs . To provide personalised features to customers in LinkedIn subscription services such as LinkedIn Premium. Allowing LinkedIn Customers to search for and contact Members that may be interested in purchasing products or services To allow LinkedIn customers to search for and contact Members that may be interested in purchasing products or services. To allow LinkedIn customers to search for job candidates who match their job criteria and contact Members directly about job opportunities. To fulfil our mission to connect the world's professionals to make them more productive and successful. To create economic opportunity for our Members, customers and Visitors. To enable our Members and Visitors to make real world connections with each other, find jobs and economic opportunity, express opinions, exchange information, and conduct business. To meet LinkedIn's customers' interests in ensuring they can advertise jobs, products or services to Members who may be interested in them. To provide Members with access to business development opportunities derived from B2B marketing. To connect Members with jobs and opportunities to match their skills, experience and career aspirations. Data relating to your use of our Services: IP address, device ID, user agent, location data, browser type and version, operating system and platform, and other online identifiers collected from Cookies and other similar technologies Data that you or others provide in your LinkedIn profile: your name, photo, current position, education, location, skills, endorsements, recommendations, and contact details Your activity data : This is data that you or others provide in posts, comments, articles, or other content on our Services including search history, feed, content you read, content you share, who you follow or is following you, connections, participation, page visits, videos you watch, actions you take on ads (views and clicks) and your job searches Your connections and group memberships Inferences we make about you Personal demographic data Law enforcement and legal requests: To disclose information about you when required by law, subpoena, or other legal process or if we have a good faith belief that disclosure is reasonably necessary for any of the following reasons: - To investigate, prevent or take action regarding suspected or actual illegal activities or to assist government enforcement agencies; - To enforce our agreements with you and our customers; - To investigate and defend ourselves against any claims and allegations, including third-party claims; - To protect the security or integrity of our Services (such as by sharing with companies facing similar threats); - To exercise or protect the rights and safety of LinkedIn, our Members, personnel or others. To advance the legitimate interests of LinkedIn and our wider community (including Members, Visitors and customers) to comply with the law. To avoid sanctions for non-compliance. To better protect against illegal or harmful activity in connection with our Services. Data relating to your use of our Services: IP address, device ID, user agent, location data, browser type and version, operating system and platform, and other online identifiers collected from Cookies and other similar technologies Data that you or others provide in your LinkedIn profile: your name, photo, current position, education, location, skills, endorsements, recommendations, and contact details Your activity data : This is data that you or others provide in posts, comments, articles, or other content on our Services including search history, feed, content you read, content you share, who you follow or is following you, connections, participation, page visits, videos you watch, actions you take on ads (views and clicks) and your job searches Your connections and group memberships Your communications with LinkedIn, including information received by post at any of our LinkedIn offices worldwide Legal advice and litigation: We retain and share information with our lawyers and relevant experts when we seek legal advice or are involved in litigation. regulatory inquiries or disputes. LinkedIn's interest to protect LinkedIn and its Affiliates, their brands, employees and business interests from legal challenges, regulatory investigations or criminal activity. To better protect the interests of our Members, Visitors and customers by identifying and addressing illegal, unfair or harmful activity. Any data relating to you that is relevant to the legal advice, possible litigation or ongoing litigation. This will depend on the nature of the legal issue and could involve any information related to your use of LinkedIn's products and the Services Research, development, statistics/insights and addressing errors: To review our products, conduct research and introduce new product features that help us better serve our Members and customers. To generate metrics to understand how our Services are used, to inform and improve product direction and development. For example, we may measure how many users visit a certain page, how long they stay, or what actions they take on that page. To undertake testing to evaluate the impact of new features. To invite you to take surveys or provide feedback and analyse your responses to gain insights into users' views, preferences, needs, or experiences with our Services and to identify corrections and/or improvements for our products. To produce aggregate insights to deliver data to Members, advertisers, and others relating to global workforce trends, to measure and improve equality of e.g. job opportunities. To provide access to third party researchers who may conduct research regarding online safety and other areas where LinkedIn is required to allow access to certain data. To identify and report aggregated trends like talent migration, hiring rates, and in-demand skills by region using LinkedIn's Economic Graph . To help us connect people to economic opportunity in new ways and by partnering with governments and organisations around the world. To fulfil our mission to connect the world's professionals to make them more productive and successful. To create economic opportunity for our Members and Visitors. To understand how people use our Services and what new features they like, so we can improve existing features and create more useful products in the future. In furtherance of our legal and other obligations to provide safe, secure, fair and legal service. Personal demographic data Your connections and group memberships Inferences we make about you Data that you or others provide in your LinkedIn profile: your name, photo, current position, education, location, skills, endorsements, recommendations, and contact details Your activity data : This is data that you or others provide in posts, comments, articles, or other content on our Services including search history, feed, content you read, content you share, who you follow or is following you, connections, participation, page visits, videos you watch, actions you take on ads (views and clicks) and your job searches Data relating to your use of our Services: IP address, device ID, user agent, location data, browser type and version, operating system and platform, and other online identifiers collected from Cookies and other similar technologies For Personalised Ads in the Designated Countries: 1. To display personalised ads: 2. Use of personal data you give to us to perform and provide ads analytics and insights 1. For personalised ads (including improving our ad tools) that are relevant to your interests, based on data from your LinkedIn profile and limited data we infer about you. To display certain ads that are relevant to your interests and preferences, based on the data we collect from our Services. To show you ads while you visit websites or apps on the LinkedIn Audience Network. 2. To measure ad performance so that we can create aggregated reports (that don't identify you) for our customers on the performance and effectiveness of their ads and other informational promotional activities on our Services, and the professional characteristics of the audiences they reach. So that we can bill and invoice our customers for our ad services and provide them with details about their advertising spend and return on investment, and support their ad budget management. To identify members who have viewed an ad and consented to receive surveys so that our customers can measure the impact of an ad. To monitor and prevent as fraud and inauthentic traffic; validate accuracy of ad measurement reporting, to support our internal ad site operations, and for LinkedIn's internal financial and operational business reporting. 1. To advance our mission to connect the world's professionals and to make them more productive and successful. To enable our members to build their professional networks, and help them pursue professional and economic goals by offering more targeted, personalised and relevant ads to our members. To generate income which enables LinkedIn to continue to operate its business. This also enables LinkedIn to provide its services for free to members, which is in LinkedIn's interests and also those of our members. To support our advertising customers' interests in advertising jobs, products or services to members that are likely to be interested in them. This enables them to conduct and grow their business. To support the interests of LinkedIn members as a whole by enabling and assisting LinkedIn members to: (i) access and provide services, (ii) assemble and associate, (iii) express themselves, including imparting and receiving information, (iv) educate themselves, (v) choose an occupation, engage in and move for work; and (vi) establish and conduct business. To support general public interests including (i) support members advance professionally by creating opportunities for skills development and employment, and helping job-seekers and employers find each other; (ii) supporting effective and efficient labour markets; (iii) supporting the free movement of workers; and (iv) supporting innovation and knowledge-sharing in the economy. 2. To help our customers measure and improve the impact and relevance of their ads, and to provide them with information about the types or categories of professionals they want to connect with. To assist our customers in assessing the value of our advertising Services. To generate income which enables LinkedIn to continue to operate its business. This also enables LinkedIn to provide its services for free to members, which is in LinkedIn's interests and also those of our members. 1. Data that you provide in your LinkedIn profile : your connections, companies you follow, education, job information, employer, skills, profile location, as well as the profile data provided by members that "look like" you, i.e. have similar professional profile attributes. Skills derived from your profile You can amend your choices at any time. You can learn more about our legitimate interests. 2. Data relating to your use of our Services: IP address, device ID, user agent, location data, browser type and versions, operating system and platform, and other online identifiers collected from Cookies and other similar technologies. Data that you or others provide in your LinkedIn profile : your connections, companies you follow, education, job information, employer, profile location Data about actions you took in response to ads on LinkedIn: Ad impressions, dwell time on an ad, ad clicks, video, ad full views. You can learn more about our ads measurement and reporting. You can amend your choices at any time. You can learn more about the ad technologies we use, our advertising services and our advertising partners. To display personalised ads and for ads analytics and insights if you are in the UK To display certain ads that are relevant to your interests, based on the data we collect from our Services. To show you ads while you visit websites or apps off LinkedIn. To advance our mission to connect the world's professionals and to make them more productive and successful. To enable our members to build their professional networks, and help them pursue professional and economic goals by offering more targeted, personalised and relevant ads to our members. To generate income which enables LinkedIn to continue to operate its business. This also enables LinkedIn to provide its services for free to members, which is in LinkedIn's interests and also those of our members. To support our advertising customers' interests in advertising jobs, products or services to members that are likely to be interested in them. This enables them to conduct and grow their business. To support the interests of LinkedIn members as a whole by enabling and assisting LinkedIn members to: (i) access and provide services, (ii) assemble and associate, (iii) express themselves, including imparting and receiving information, (iv) educate themselves, (v) choose an occupation, engage in and move for work; and (vi) establish and conduct business. To support general public interests including (i) support members advance professionally by creating opportunities for skills development and employment, and helping job-seekers and employers find each other; (i) supporting effective and efficient labour markets; (iii) supporting the free movement of workers; and (iv) supporting innovation and knowledge-sharing in the economy Data that you provide in your LinkedIn profile : your connections, companies you follow, education, job information, employer. skills (that you or others provide about you), profile location Your activity data : This is data that we observe over time about your engagement with our Services, such as company page visits, videos you watch, actions you take on ads (views and clicks) and your participation in events on LinkedIn, as well as the profile data provided by members that "look like" you, i.e. have similar professional profile attributes. Inferences we make about you including your city, country and continent based on IP address, your age range and gender, and inferred interests and traits Actions by Members with similar profiles to yours Third party requests to show ads to LinkedIn Members Data relating to your use of our services, such as IP address, device ID, user agent, location data, browser type and versions, operating system and platform, and other online identifiers collected from Cookies and other similar technologies You can amend your choices at any time Learn more about the ad technologies we use, our advertising services and our advertising partners. To count ad clicks and conversions To perform ads measurement of conversion counts and value for business reporting purposes and to demonstrate the performance of our ads services to ads customers. To advance our mission to connect the world's professionals and to make them more productive and successful. To support our understanding of our advertising business and its effectiveness, allowing us to improve our business as a whole and advance our mission. To support our advertising customers' interests in: (i) understanding the effectiveness of their advertising campaigns, and (ii) advertising jobs, products or services to members that are likely to be interested in them, This enables them to conduct and grow their business. Data about actions you took on LinkedIn: Ad impressions, dwell time on an ad, ad clicks, video as full views Device information: App version, operating system Conversion information from ads customers that does not identify you Our AI features generally: Members or customers may provide personal data as an input to an AI or generative AI feature ("AI-powered feature"), which could result in personal data being included within output. Automatically processing your data (including your profile data and posts) as an input for an AI-powered feature (e.g. providing more relevant responses to your queries or in connection with your inputs to a generative AI feature). To power our Hiring Assistant AI features we process profile and resume data of Members to help hirers using our Recruiter and Jobs products review and source potential candidates including through matching job qualifications to Member data and providing AI generated summaries and explanations of a candidate potential match to a relevant position. Using automated techniques, including generative AI-powered tools as part of our online safety and security efforts. To enable economic opportunity and help our Members and customers be more productive and successful. To enhance the safety and security of our platform. To improve the efficiency and effectiveness of providing our Services. To ensure that our products, features and Services are innovative, relevant and high quality. For our Hiring Assistant AI features: To make the recruiting and job seeking processes easier for customers and Members, which helps LinkedIn conduct its business more effectively. To enable our customers to organise information quickly and identify suitable candidates based on various criteria, benefiting Member job seekers by connecting them with relevant opportunities and broadening the candidate pool. To provide economic opportunities for every member of the global workforce. So that Members can exercise their right to free movement for work. So that Members can be discovered for appropriate job opportunities that match their skills and experience. To increase access to the labour market and ensure that underrepresented groups with the required or desired skills are considered along with candidates who meet more traditional criteria. Personal data manually input into an AI powered feature by Members Feedback you provide on AI features Data that you or others provide in a resume you provide or your LinkedIn profile : your name, photo, current position and work experience, volunteer experience, education, location, skills, endorsements, recommendations, honours and awards, people and companies you follow, skills, patents, publications, licenses and certifications, recommendations, interests, and contact details Your connections and group memberships Conversation data that users input into our GAI features (prompts, search text, queries, chats, responses, and other input and output data) Member generated content (posts, articles, poll responses, contributions and comments) For our Hiring Assistant AI features: LinkedIn profile data (the following sections, if complete): work experience, location, education, skills, summary, certifications and licenses, volunteering experience, publications, and patents. Your Open to Work status and preferences. Your resumes (if you have made them available). Responses to screening questions (if you have made them available). Learn more about our Hiring Assistants and how you can exercise your rights. Data relating to your use of our Services: IP address, device ID, user agent, location data, browser type and version, operating system and platform, and other online identifiers collected from Cookies and other similar technologies Inferences we make about you Your activity data : This is data that you or others provide in posts, comments, articles, or other content on our Services including search history, feed, content you read, content you share, who you follow or is following you, connections, participation, page visits, videos you watch, actions you take on ads (views and clicks) and your job searches Learn more about our use of your data for Generative AI. To offer our content-generating Generative AI features to Members To provide our Generative AI-powered Services to LinkedIn Members, including through Generative AI processing of the data described in the “Data used” column of this row to: - Suggest textual content to Members for those Members to use in a post or in their profiles. - Prepare draft InMails or messages for Member or customer users to send. - Create content that LinkedIn directly publishes on the platform (e.g., Collaborative Articles, Account IQ). - Suggest advertising copy to LMS customers. - Provide chatbot conversations to assist Members and customers in completing a task. If the output of the GenAI model is used for relevancy or ranking purposes, to: - Support relevancy, ranking, search, and similar functionalities on the LinkedIn platform. To enable economic opportunity and help our Members and customers be more productive and successful. To improve the efficiency and effectiveness of providing our Services. To ensure that our products, features and Services are innovative, relevant and high quality. Data that you or others provide in your LinkedIn profile : your name, photo, current position and work experience, education, location, skills, summary, certifications, licenses, volunteering experiences, publications, patents, endorsements, and recommendations Your activity data : This is data that we observe over time about your engagement with our Services, such as company page visits, videos you watch, actions you take on ads (views and clicks) and your participation in events on LinkedIn Conversation data that users input into our GAI features (prompts, search text, queries, chats, responses, and other input and output data) Personal data manually input into an AI powered feature by Members Member generated content (posts, articles, poll responses, contributions and comments) Feedback you provide on AI features Data relating to your use of our Services: IP address, device ID, user agent, location data, browser type and version, operating system and platform, and other online identifiers collected from Cookies and other similar technologies Inferences we make about you To train our content-generating Generative AI systems To train, fine-tune, evaluate and improve our Generative AI models used to create content (textual, audio, visual, and other media, or multimedia) on the LinkedIn platform (or elsewhere) and in LinkedIn’s lines of business. Content creation includes: - Suggesting textual content to Members for those Members to use in a post or in their profiles. - Preparing draft InMails or messages for Members or customer users to send (e.g., InBart (a LinkedIn GAI model), which was trained to create draft messages for recruiters). - Creating content that LinkedIn directly publishes on the platform (e.g., Collaborative Articles, Account IQ). - Suggesting advertising copy to LMS customers. - Responding to Member and customer prompts through a conversational assistant. To provide and improve assistant experiences offered to LinkedIn members, customers, and others, enabling them to find economic opportunity and be more productive and successful. To ensure that LinkedIn’s foundation models are fair, safe, accurate, and effective in the LinkedIn professional context. To provide a conversational assistant to assist members for a variety of beneficial tasks on the LinkedIn platform and to promote an accurate, responsive, safe, and responsible experience for members and customers. Data that you or others provide in your LinkedIn profile : your name, photo, current position and work experience, education, location, skills, summary, certifications, licenses, volunteering experiences, publications, patents, endorsements, and recommendations - Conversation data that users input into our GAI features (prompts, search text, queries, chats, responses, and other input and output data) - Group activity and group messages - Member generated content (posts, articles, poll responses, contributions and comments) - Responses to screening questions and resumes that members provide add to their LinkedIn account on the LinkedIn platform for ongoing LinkedIn use You can opt out of our use of your data to train our content-generating AI models at any time. Learn more about our use of your data for Generative AI. To improve LinkedIn's products and Services generally To ensure our products and Services function as intended, to identify and resolve issues that may arise, and to evaluate the performance and reliability of new features, including gathering insights to inform product development, validating design assumptions, and understanding user preferences. To engage in research activities—such as user studies and feedback collection—to assess satisfaction and identify areas for improvement across our offerings and brand experience (including using Members' feedback to improve, correct or modify our Gen AI-powered features. To train, pre-train, fine-tune, evaluate, and improve AI systems that support critical functions such as content classification, trust and safety enforcement, and security threat detection To ensure that our products and Services function as intended. This includes monitoring performance, identifying technical issues, and implementing fixes to maintain a consistent and reliable user experience. To develop and improve our offerings, including testing new features, evaluating their effectiveness, and iterating based on performance and user interaction to ensure our products remain competitive and relevant. To align product development with user needs and expectations to help us deliver features that are meaningful and valuable to our members and customers. To better understand how our products are used and perceived so that we can make informed business decisions and enhance our brand reputation. To optimise internal operations, resource allocation, and long-term planning To ensure the safety and security of our platform, products and Services. To enhance the accuracy and reliability of our AI-driven moderation and classification tools to maintain trust and integrity. To improve operational efficiency and product performance by refining AI systems that support scalable enforcement and compliance across our Services. To foster innovation and economic opportunity by advancing AI capabilities that power professional tools and Services for our Members and customers. Data that you or others provide in your LinkedIn profile : your name, photo, current position and work experience, education, location, skills, summary, certifications, licenses , volunteering experiences, publications, patents, endorsements, and recommendations Conversation data that users input into our GAI features (prompts, search text, queries, chats, responses, and other input and output data) Your activity data : This is data that we observe over time about your engagement with our Services, such as company page visits, videos you watch, actions you take on ads (views and clicks) and your participation in events on LinkedIn Your connections and group memberships Your group activity and group messages Member generated content (posts, articles, poll responses, contributions and comments) Responses to screening questions and resumes that Members provide add to their LinkedIn account on the LinkedIn platform and for ongoing LinkedIn use Feedback you provide on our Services (including about our AI powered features) Data that you provide when you contact us or request support via email, our ticket system or live chat. This may include your name, email address, LinkedIn account details, phone number, payment information and the details of your query or issue Data relating to your use of our Services: IP address, device ID, user agent, location data, browser type and version, operating system and platform, and other online identifiers collected from Cookies and other similar technologies Inferences we make about you Please see the "Objecting to the use of your data" section below for information on how to object to the use of your data for general product improvement purposes. Learn more about our use of your data for Generative AI. Direct Marketing: Where permitted, sending marketing emails and other marketing communications about LinkedIn content, products or offers that we think will interest you. LinkedIn may use profiling techniques to achieve this purpose. Promoting LinkedIn subscription services and other products and features we think you'd like on and off LinkedIn. To enable economic opportunity and help our Members be more productive and successful. To enhance and grow our business, meet the needs of our Visitors, Members and customers, and better ensure that our Members, customers and Visitors receive the quality services from LinkedIn. 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https://dev.to/t/githunt#main-content | Githunt - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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Right menu Why GitHubCard is the Final Tool You Need for Your Github Profile Colin Lee Colin Lee Colin Lee Follow Jan 10 Why GitHubCard is the Final Tool You Need for Your Github Profile # github # tooling # tutorial # githunt Comments 1 comment 3 min read sunpeak: ChatGPT App Framework Abe Wheeler Abe Wheeler Abe Wheeler Follow Dec 11 '25 sunpeak: ChatGPT App Framework # showdev # mcp # githunt # news 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read Explore My GitHub Projects — Building, Learning & Shipping Muhammad Huzaifa Muhammad Huzaifa Muhammad Huzaifa Follow Nov 29 '25 Explore My GitHub Projects — Building, Learning & Shipping # git # github # publicinbox # githunt 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read VueFinder — A Modern File Manager for Vue Yusuf Yusuf Yusuf Follow Nov 26 '25 VueFinder — A Modern File Manager for Vue # webdev # vue # githunt 2 reactions Comments Add Comment 1 min read How I Fixed GitHub's Large File Warning with Git LFS for Auvra AI Aldorax Aldorax Aldorax Follow Jun 28 '25 How I Fixed GitHub's Large File Warning with Git LFS for Auvra AI # webdev # git # githunt # nextjs 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 3 min read Why This CTO Thinks JavaScript Is the Worst Programming Language Pam Jim Pam Jim Pam Jim Follow May 27 '25 Why This CTO Thinks JavaScript Is the Worst Programming Language # javascript # programming # webdev # githunt Comments 1 comment 2 min read Demystifying Blockchain for Beginners — Join My Open Source Crypto Commerce Project 🚀 Anushka Gupta Anushka Gupta Anushka Gupta Follow Apr 13 '25 Demystifying Blockchain for Beginners — Join My Open Source Crypto Commerce Project 🚀 # cryptocurrency # blockchain # opensource # githunt 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read Git Branching Strategies: A Comprehensive Guide Karm Patel Karm Patel Karm Patel Follow Mar 16 '25 Git Branching Strategies: A Comprehensive Guide # git # github # githunt # twitter 113 reactions Comments 7 comments 6 min read How to Create a Sample Resume and Deploy it on GitHub Pages Kosisochukwu Ugochukwu Kosisochukwu Ugochukwu Kosisochukwu Ugochukwu Follow Feb 18 '25 How to Create a Sample Resume and Deploy it on GitHub Pages # github # git # githunt # tutorial Comments Add Comment 3 min read Today's GitHub Repositories Dev Sk Dev Sk Dev Sk Follow Dec 4 '24 Today's GitHub Repositories # ai # webdev # programming # githunt Comments Add Comment 1 min read [ROAST] Launching on DevHunt Doesn't Work? 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Here's What I Found! # devhunt # opensource # marketing # githunt 7 reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read how we got featured on trending GitHub repos Matthew Diakonov Matthew Diakonov Matthew Diakonov Follow Sep 30 '24 how we got featured on trending GitHub repos # github # githunt Comments Add Comment 1 min read Initialize Git for a Private Repository Sanya_Lazy Sanya_Lazy Sanya_Lazy Follow Sep 18 '24 Initialize Git for a Private Repository # github # git # githubactions # githunt 6 reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Top Github repositories for 10+ programming languages shrey vijayvargiya shrey vijayvargiya shrey vijayvargiya Follow Jul 16 '24 Top Github repositories for 10+ programming languages # webdev # beginners # programming # githunt 11 reactions Comments Add Comment 5 min read Crafting Your GitHub Showcase: Elevate Your Profile in Minutes Geethanjali Geethanjali Geethanjali Follow Aug 21 '23 Crafting Your GitHub Showcase: Elevate Your Profile in Minutes # github # git # githunt 4 reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Iris Dataset Analysis in R Mahesh K Mahesh K Mahesh K Follow Feb 5 '23 Iris Dataset Analysis in R # github # githunt # opensource 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read Thinking Like a Hacker: Finding Source Code Leaks on GitHub Thomas Segura Thomas Segura Thomas Segura Follow for GitGuardian Jan 11 '23 Thinking Like a Hacker: Finding Source Code Leaks on GitHub # github # githunt # cybersecurity # opensource 4 reactions Comments 2 comments 5 min read What's new in SeaORM 0.10.x SeaQL SeaQL SeaQL Follow Nov 23 '22 What's new in SeaORM 0.10.x # showdev # opensource # rust # githunt 5 reactions Comments Add Comment 7 min read Tree Maker __ Convert Markdown to tree! Ochi Daiki Ochi Daiki Ochi Daiki Follow Nov 18 '22 Tree Maker __ Convert Markdown to tree! # webdev # webassembly # go # githunt 5 reactions Comments Add Comment 1 min read What's new in SeaQuery 0.27.0 SeaQL SeaQL SeaQL Follow Nov 10 '22 What's new in SeaQuery 0.27.0 # showdev # rust # opensource # githunt 5 reactions Comments Add Comment 6 min read Some less popular git commands Akash R Chandran Akash R Chandran Akash R Chandran Follow Oct 16 '22 Some less popular git commands # git # github # githunt # gitcommands 54 reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read Getting Started with Seaography SeaQL SeaQL SeaQL Follow Oct 5 '22 Getting Started with Seaography # showdev # rust # graphql # githunt 8 reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read Introducing Seaography SeaQL SeaQL SeaQL Follow Oct 3 '22 Introducing Seaography # showdev # rust # githunt # graphql 10 reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Hacktoberfest is started, give your contribution! Hacktoberfest: Maintainer Spotlight ZigRazor ZigRazor ZigRazor Follow Oct 3 '22 Hacktoberfest is started, give your contribution! # hacktoberfest # opensource # github # githunt 3 reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Difference Between Git and GitHub AlishaAS AlishaAS AlishaAS Follow Sep 9 '22 Difference Between Git and GitHub # github # githunt 4 reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read loading... trending guides/resources VueFinder — A Modern File Manager for Vue Explore My GitHub Projects — Building, Learning & Shipping Why GitHubCard is the Final Tool You Need for Your Github Profile 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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https://forem.dev/code-of-conduct | Forem.dev Migration - Forem Core Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account Forem Core Close Forem.dev Migration We have designated core.forem.com as the new space for news and discussion with regards to the Forem project . We have been through a journey with many iterations and a fresh start seemed ideal. Because forem.dev was never well managed, we felt like it was not worth entirely preserving it. However, if there is any content you might be specifically interested in, you can contact yo@forem.com and we will try to help provide it. Please feel free to post on core.forem.com if you have any questions about the project. For more info, check out our initial post: A new space for discussions surrounding the Forem core open source project Ben Halpern for The DEV Team ・ May 8 #announcement We are happy to have you on this open source journey! 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Forem Core — Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Home About Contact Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . Forem Core © 2016 - 2026. Community building community Log in Create account | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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https://dev.to/t/technical | Technical - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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Right menu How I Built a Zero-Dependency Technical Research Blog with Just HTML, CSS, and Markdown Huy Pham Huy Pham Huy Pham Follow Jan 13 How I Built a Zero-Dependency Technical Research Blog with Just HTML, CSS, and Markdown # news # research # technical # claudecode Comments Add Comment 2 min read A Practical Guide to Building Your First Card Payment System with Blnk Finance Etop - Essien Emmanuella Ubokabasi Etop - Essien Emmanuella Ubokabasi Etop - Essien Emmanuella Ubokabasi Follow Jan 9 A Practical Guide to Building Your First Card Payment System with Blnk Finance # technical # devrel # blnkfinance # fintech 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 11 min read Technical SEO for E-commerce in 2026: What Engineers Actually Need to Get Right Blue Tuskr USA Blue Tuskr USA Blue Tuskr USA Follow Dec 29 '25 Technical SEO for E-commerce in 2026: What Engineers Actually Need to Get Right # seo # ecommerce # technical # s Comments Add Comment 4 min read Your Guide to Mastering Email Forwarding Wajeeha Zeeshan Wajeeha Zeeshan Wajeeha Zeeshan Follow for IT Services and Consulting Dec 10 '25 Your Guide to Mastering Email Forwarding # email # businessgrowth # technical # microsoft365 Comments Add Comment 2 min read Apache SeaTunnel vs. DataX, Flink CDC, and Talend: A Full Technical Comparison Apache SeaTunnel Apache SeaTunnel Apache SeaTunnel Follow Dec 4 '25 Apache SeaTunnel vs. DataX, Flink CDC, and Talend: A Full Technical Comparison # apacheseatunnel # datascience # flink # technical 5 reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Extracting IP Addresses from Palo Alto Configs: A Technical Guide SimpleIPAM SimpleIPAM SimpleIPAM Follow Nov 30 '25 Extracting IP Addresses from Palo Alto Configs: A Technical Guide # paloalto # parsing # technical # xml Comments Add Comment 3 min read Parsing FortiGate Configs: What We Extract and Why SimpleIPAM SimpleIPAM SimpleIPAM Follow Nov 30 '25 Parsing FortiGate Configs: What We Extract and Why # fortigate # parsing # technical Comments Add Comment 4 min read Allowing/Blocking Emails or Domains in Microsoft 365 Wajeeha Zeeshan Wajeeha Zeeshan Wajeeha Zeeshan Follow for IT Services and Consulting Nov 27 '25 Allowing/Blocking Emails or Domains in Microsoft 365 # emails # domains # technical # microsoft365 Comments Add Comment 2 min read Building an Enhanced Squoosh: High-Performance Local Image Compression with libimagequant-wasm AlixWang AlixWang AlixWang Follow Oct 27 '25 Building an Enhanced Squoosh: High-Performance Local Image Compression with libimagequant-wasm # technical # webassembly # performance Comments Add Comment 7 min read Voice Search Ready: Optimizing E‑commerce Product Pages for 2025 Ramer Lacida Ramer Lacida Ramer Lacida Follow Sep 21 '25 Voice Search Ready: Optimizing E‑commerce Product Pages for 2025 # seo # voicesearch # ecommerce # technical Comments Add Comment 4 min read Turbocharge Your E‑commerce Site Speed: SEO Tips for 2025 Rankings Ramer Lacida Ramer Lacida Ramer Lacida Follow Sep 21 '25 Turbocharge Your E‑commerce Site Speed: SEO Tips for 2025 Rankings # ecommerce # sitespeed # seo # technical Comments Add Comment 4 min read How to conduct a useful technical interview (based on my personal experience (subjective opinion)) Anton Malofeev Anton Malofeev Anton Malofeev Follow Sep 15 '25 How to conduct a useful technical interview (based on my personal experience (subjective opinion)) # technical # interview 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read DevLog 2025801: Procedural Context Type Charles Zhang Charles Zhang Charles Zhang Follow for Methodox Technologies, Inc. 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https://docusaurus.io/docs/docusaurus.config.js/#baseUrl | docusaurus.config.js | Docusaurus Skip to main content 🎉️ Docusaurus v3.9 is out! 🥳️ Docusaurus Docs API Blog Showcase Community 3.9.2 Canary 🚧 3.9.2 3.8.1 3.7.0 3.6.3 3.5.2 3.4.0 3.3.2 3.2.1 3.1.1 3.0.1 2.x Archived versions 2.3.1 2.2.0 2.1.0 2.0.1 1.x.x All versions English English Français Português (Brasil) 한국어 中文(中国) Help Us Translate Search Docusaurus CLI Client API docusaurus.config.js Plugin method references Plugins Themes Miscellaneous docusaurus.config.js Version: 3.9.2 On this page docusaurus.config.js info Refer to the Getting Started Configuration for examples. Overview docusaurus.config.js contains configurations for your site and is placed in the root directory of your site. note With a TypeScript Docusaurus codebase your config file may be called docusaurus.config.ts . The syntax is broadly identical to the js config file with the addition of types. You can see an example on the Docusaurus Website itself. This file is run in Node.js and should export a site configuration object, or a function that creates it. The docusaurus.config.js file supports: ES Modules CommonJS TypeScript Examples: docusaurus.config.js export default { title : 'Docusaurus' , url : 'https://docusaurus.io' , // your site config ... } ; docusaurus.config.js export default async function createConfigAsync ( ) { return { title : 'Docusaurus' , url : 'https://docusaurus.io' , // your site config ... } ; } tip Refer to Syntax to declare docusaurus.config.js for a more exhaustive list of examples and explanations. Required fields title Type: string Title for your website. Will be used in metadata and as browser tab title. docusaurus.config.js export default { title : 'Docusaurus' , } ; url Type: string URL for your website. This can also be considered the top-level hostname. For example, https://facebook.github.io is the URL of https://facebook.github.io/metro/ , and https://docusaurus.io is the URL for https://docusaurus.io . This field is related to the baseUrl field. docusaurus.config.js export default { url : 'https://docusaurus.io' , } ; Special case for i18n sites If your site uses multiple locales, it is possible to provide a distinct url for each locale thanks to the siteConfig.i18n.localeConfigs[<locale>].url attribute. This makes it possible to deploy a localized Docusaurus site deploy a localized Docusaurus site over multiple domains . baseUrl Type: string The base URL of your site is the path segment appearing just after the url , letting you eventually host your site under a subpath instead of at the root of the domain. For example, let's consider you want to host a site at https://facebook.github.io/metro/ , then you must configure it accordingly: url should be 'https://facebook.github.io' baseUrl should be '/metro/' By default, a Docusaurus site is hosted at the root of the domain: docusaurus.config.js export default { baseUrl : '/' , } ; Special case for i18n sites If your site uses multiple locales, then Docusaurus will automatically localize the baseUrl of your site based on smart heuristics: For the default locale, baseUrl will be /<siteBaseUrl>/ For other locales, baseUrl will be /<siteBaseUrl>/<locale>/ When building a single locale at a time (with docusaurus build --locale <locale> ), baseUrl will be /<siteBaseUrl>/ , assuming the intent is to deploy each locale on distinct domains . When the localized baseUrl Docusaurus computes doesn't satisfy you, it's always possible to override it by providing an explicit localized baseUrl thanks to the siteConfig.i18n.localeConfigs[<locale>].baseUrl attribute. Optional fields favicon Type: string | undefined Path to your site favicon; must be a URL that can be used in link's href. For example, if your favicon is in static/img/favicon.ico : docusaurus.config.js export default { favicon : '/img/favicon.ico' , } ; trailingSlash Type: boolean | undefined Allow to customize the presence/absence of a trailing slash at the end of URLs/links, and how static HTML files are generated: undefined (default): keeps URLs untouched, and emit /docs/myDoc/index.html for /docs/myDoc.md true : add trailing slashes to URLs/links, and emit /docs/myDoc/index.html for /docs/myDoc.md false : remove trailing slashes from URLs/links, and emit /docs/myDoc.html for /docs/myDoc.md tip Each static hosting provider serves static files differently (this behavior may even change over time). Refer to the deployment guide and slorber/trailing-slash-guide to choose the appropriate setting. i18n Type: Object The i18n configuration object to localize your site . Example: docusaurus.config.js export default { i18n : { defaultLocale : 'en' , locales : [ 'en' , 'fa' ] , path : 'i18n' , localeConfigs : { en : { label : 'English' , direction : 'ltr' , htmlLang : 'en-US' , calendar : 'gregory' , path : 'en' , translate : false , url : 'https://en.example.com' , baseUrl : '/' , } , fa : { label : 'فارسی' , direction : 'rtl' , htmlLang : 'fa-IR' , calendar : 'persian' , path : 'fa' , translate : true , url : 'https://fa.example.com' , baseUrl : '/' , } , } , } , } ; defaultLocale : The locale that (1) does not have its name in the base URL (2) gets started with docusaurus start without --locale option (3) will be used for the <link hrefLang="x-default"> tag locales : List of locales deployed on your site. Must contain defaultLocale . path : Root folder which all locale folders are relative to. Can be absolute or relative to the config file. Defaults to i18n . localeConfigs : Individual options for each locale. label : The label displayed for this locale in the locales dropdown. direction : ltr (default) or rtl (for right-to-left languages like Farsi, Arabic, Hebrew, etc.). Used to select the locale's CSS and HTML meta attribute. htmlLang : BCP 47 language tag to use in <html lang="..."> (or any other DOM tag name) and in <link ... hreflang="..."> calendar : the calendar used to calculate the date era. Note that it doesn't control the actual string displayed: MM/DD/YYYY and DD/MM/YYYY are both gregory . To choose the format ( DD/MM/YYYY or MM/DD/YYYY ), set your locale name to en-GB or en-US ( en means en-US ). path : Root folder that all plugin localization folders of this locale are relative to. Will be resolved against i18n.path . Defaults to the locale's name ( i18n/<locale> ). Note: this has no effect on the locale's baseUrl —customization of base URL is a work-in-progress. translate : Should we run the translation process for this locale? By default, it is enabled if the i18n/<locale> folder exists url : This lets you override the siteConfig.url , particularly useful if your site is deployed over multiple domains . baseUrl : This lets you override the default localized baseUrl Docusaurus infers from your siteConfig.baseUrl , giving you more control to host your localized site in less common ways, in particularly deployments over multi-domains future Type: Object The future configuration object permits to opt-in for upcoming/unstable/experimental Docusaurus features that are not ready for prime time. It is also a way to opt-in for upcoming breaking changes coming in the next major versions, enabling you to prepare your site for the next version while staying on the previous one. The Remix Future Flags blog post greatly explains this idea. Breaking changes in minor versions Features prefixed by experimental_ or unstable_ are subject to changes in minor versions , and not considered as Semantic Versioning breaking changes . Features namespaced by v<MajorVersion> ( v6 v7 , etc.) are future flags that are expected to be turned on by default in the next major versions. These are less likely to change, but we keep the possibility to do so. future API breaking changes should be easy to handle, and will be documented in minor/major version blog posts. Example: docusaurus.config.js export default { future : { v4 : { removeLegacyPostBuildHeadAttribute : true , useCssCascadeLayers : true , } , experimental_faster : { swcJsLoader : true , swcJsMinimizer : true , swcHtmlMinimizer : true , lightningCssMinimizer : true , rspackBundler : true , rspackPersistentCache : true , ssgWorkerThreads : true , mdxCrossCompilerCache : true , } , experimental_storage : { type : 'localStorage' , namespace : true , } , experimental_router : 'hash' , } , } ; v4 : Permits to opt-in for upcoming Docusaurus v4 breaking changes and features, to prepare your site in advance for this new version. Use true as a shorthand to enable all the flags. removeLegacyPostBuildHeadAttribute : Removes the legacy plugin.postBuild({head}) API that prevents us from applying useful SSG optimizations ( explanations ). useCssCascadeLayers : This enables the Docusaurus CSS Cascade Layers plugin with pre-configured layers that we plan to apply by default for Docusaurus v4. experimental_faster : An object containing feature flags to make the Docusaurus build faster. This requires adding the @docusaurus/faster package to your site's dependencies. Use true as a shorthand to enable all flags. Read more on the Docusaurus Faster issue. Available feature flags: swcJsLoader : Use SWC to transpile JS (instead of Babel ). swcJsMinimizer : Use SWC to minify JS (instead of Terser ). swcHtmlMinimizer : Use SWC to minify HTML and inlined JS/CSS (instead of html-minifier-terser ). lightningCssMinimizer : Use Lightning CSS to minify CSS (instead of cssnano and clean-css ). rspackBundler : Use Rspack to bundle your app (instead of webpack ). rspackPersistentCache : Use Rspack Persistent Cache to re-build your app faster on subsequent builds. Requires rspackBundler: true . Requires persisting ./node_modules/.cache across rebuilds. mdxCrossCompilerCache : Compile MDX files only once for both browser/Node.js environments instead of twice. ssgWorkerThreads : Using a Node.js worker thread pool to execute the static site generation phase faster. Requires future.v4.removeLegacyPostBuildHeadAttribute to be turned on. experimental_storage : Site-wide browser storage options that theme authors should strive to respect. type : The browser storage theme authors should use. Possible values are localStorage and sessionStorage . Defaults to localStorage . namespace : Whether to namespace the browser storage keys to avoid storage key conflicts when Docusaurus sites are hosted under the same domain, or on localhost. Possible values are string | boolean . The namespace is appended at the end of the storage keys key-namespace . Use true to automatically generate a random namespace from your site url + baseUrl . Defaults to false (no namespace, historical behavior). experimental_router : The router type to use. Possible values are browser and hash . Defaults to browser . The hash router is only useful for rare cases where you want to opt-out of static site generation, have a fully client-side app with a single index.html entrypoint file. This can be useful to distribute a Docusaurus site as a .zip archive that you can browse locally without running a web server . noIndex Type: boolean This option adds <meta name="robots" content="noindex, nofollow"> to every page to tell search engines to avoid indexing your site (more information here ). Example: docusaurus.config.js export default { noIndex : true , // Defaults to `false` } ; onBrokenLinks Type: 'ignore' | 'log' | 'warn' | 'throw' The behavior of Docusaurus when it detects any broken link. By default, it throws an error, to ensure you never ship any broken link. note The broken links detection is only available for a production build ( docusaurus build ). onBrokenAnchors Type: 'ignore' | 'log' | 'warn' | 'throw' The behavior of Docusaurus when it detects any broken anchor declared with the Heading component of Docusaurus. By default, it prints a warning, to let you know about your broken anchors. onBrokenMarkdownLinks Deprecated Deprecated in Docusaurus v3.9, and will be removed in Docusaurus v4. Replaced by siteConfig.markdown.hooks.onBrokenMarkdownLinks Type: 'ignore' | 'log' | 'warn' | 'throw' The behavior of Docusaurus when it detects any broken Markdown link. By default, it prints a warning, to let you know about your broken Markdown link. onDuplicateRoutes Type: 'ignore' | 'log' | 'warn' | 'throw' The behavior of Docusaurus when it detects any duplicate routes . By default, it displays a warning after you run yarn start or yarn build . tagline Type: string The tagline for your website. docusaurus.config.js export default { tagline : 'Docusaurus makes it easy to maintain Open Source documentation websites.' , } ; organizationName Type: string The GitHub user or organization that owns the repository. You don't need this if you are not using the docusaurus deploy command. docusaurus.config.js export default { // Docusaurus' organization is facebook organizationName : 'facebook' , } ; projectName Type: string The name of the GitHub repository. You don't need this if you are not using the docusaurus deploy command. docusaurus.config.js export default { projectName : 'docusaurus' , } ; deploymentBranch Type: string The name of the branch to deploy the static files to. You don't need this if you are not using the docusaurus deploy command. docusaurus.config.js export default { deploymentBranch : 'gh-pages' , } ; githubHost Type: string The hostname of your server. Useful if you are using GitHub Enterprise. You don't need this if you are not using the docusaurus deploy command. docusaurus.config.js export default { githubHost : 'github.com' , } ; githubPort Type: string The port of your server. Useful if you are using GitHub Enterprise. You don't need this if you are not using the docusaurus deploy command. docusaurus.config.js export default { githubPort : '22' , } ; themeConfig Type: Object The theme configuration object to customize your site UI like navbar and footer. Example: docusaurus.config.js export default { themeConfig : { docs : { sidebar : { hideable : false , autoCollapseCategories : false , } , } , colorMode : { defaultMode : 'light' , disableSwitch : false , respectPrefersColorScheme : true , } , navbar : { title : 'Site Title' , logo : { alt : 'Site Logo' , src : 'img/logo.svg' , width : 32 , height : 32 , } , items : [ { to : 'docs/docusaurus.config.js' , activeBasePath : 'docs' , label : 'docusaurus.config.js' , position : 'left' , } , // ... other links ] , } , footer : { style : 'dark' , links : [ { title : 'Docs' , items : [ { label : 'Docs' , to : 'docs/doc1' , } , ] , } , // ... other links ] , logo : { alt : 'Meta Open Source Logo' , src : 'img/meta_oss_logo.png' , href : 'https://opensource.fb.com' , width : 160 , height : 51 , } , copyright : ` Copyright © ${ new Date ( ) . getFullYear ( ) } Facebook, Inc. ` , // You can also put own HTML here } , } , } ; plugins Type: PluginConfig[] type PluginConfig = string | [ string , any ] | PluginModule | [ PluginModule , any ] ; See plugin method references for the shape of a PluginModule . docusaurus.config.js export default { plugins : [ 'docusaurus-plugin-awesome' , [ 'docusuarus-plugin-confetti' , { fancy : false } ] , ( ) => ( { postBuild ( ) { console . log ( 'Build finished' ) ; } , } ) , ] , } ; themes Type: PluginConfig[] docusaurus.config.js export default { themes : [ '@docusaurus/theme-classic' ] , } ; presets Type: PresetConfig[] type PresetConfig = string | [ string , any ] ; docusaurus.config.js export default { presets : [ ] , } ; markdown The global Docusaurus Markdown config. Type: MarkdownConfig type MarkdownPreprocessor = ( args : { filePath : string ; fileContent : string ; } ) => string ; type MDX1CompatOptions = | boolean | { comments : boolean ; admonitions : boolean ; headingIds : boolean ; } ; export type ParseFrontMatter = ( params : { filePath : string ; fileContent : string ; defaultParseFrontMatter : ParseFrontMatter ; } ) => Promise < { frontMatter : { [ key : string ] : unknown } ; content : string ; } > ; type MarkdownAnchorsConfig = { maintainCase : boolean ; } ; type OnBrokenMarkdownLinksFunction = ( params : { sourceFilePath : string ; // MD/MDX source file relative to cwd url : string ; // Link url node : Link | Definition ; // mdast Node } ) => void | string ; type OnBrokenMarkdownImagesFunction = ( params : { sourceFilePath : string ; // MD/MDX source file relative to cwd url : string ; // Image url node : Image ; // mdast node } ) => void | string ; type ReportingSeverity = 'ignore' | 'log' | 'warn' | 'throw' ; type MarkdownHooks = { onBrokenMarkdownLinks : ReportingSeverity | OnBrokenMarkdownLinksFunction ; onBrokenMarkdownImages : ReportingSeverity | OnBrokenMarkdownImagesFunction ; } ; type MarkdownConfig = { format : 'mdx' | 'md' | 'detect' ; mermaid : boolean ; emoji : boolean ; preprocessor ? : MarkdownPreprocessor ; parseFrontMatter ? : ParseFrontMatter ; mdx1Compat : MDX1CompatOptions ; remarkRehypeOptions : object ; // see https://github.com/remarkjs/remark-rehype#options anchors : MarkdownAnchorsConfig ; hooks : MarkdownHooks ; } ; Example: docusaurus.config.js export default { markdown : { format : 'mdx' , mermaid : true , emoji : true , preprocessor : ( { filePath , fileContent } ) => { return fileContent . replaceAll ( '{{MY_VAR}}' , 'MY_VALUE' ) ; } , parseFrontMatter : async ( params ) => { const result = await params . defaultParseFrontMatter ( params ) ; result . frontMatter . description = result . frontMatter . description ?. replaceAll ( '{{MY_VAR}}' , 'MY_VALUE' ) ; return result ; } , mdx1Compat : { comments : true , admonitions : true , headingIds : true , } , anchors : { maintainCase : true , } , hooks : { onBrokenMarkdownLinks : 'warn' , onBrokenMarkdownImages : 'throw' , } , } , } ; Name Type Default Description format 'mdx' | 'md' | 'detect' 'mdx' The default parser format to use for Markdown content. Using 'detect' will select the appropriate format automatically based on file extensions: .md vs .mdx . mermaid boolean false When true , allows Docusaurus to render Markdown code blocks with mermaid language as Mermaid diagrams. emoji boolean true When true , allows Docusaurus to render emoji shortcodes (e.g., :+1: ) as Unicode emoji (👍). When false , emoji shortcodes are left as-is. preprocessor MarkdownPreprocessor undefined Gives you the ability to alter the Markdown content string before parsing. Use it as a last-resort escape hatch or workaround: it is almost always better to implement a Remark/Rehype plugin. parseFrontMatter ParseFrontMatter undefined Gives you the ability to provide your own front matter parser, or to enhance the default parser. Read our front matter guide for details. mdx1Compat MDX1CompatOptions {comments: true, admonitions: true, headingIds: true} Compatibility options to make it easier to upgrade to Docusaurus v3+. anchors MarkdownAnchorsConfig {maintainCase: false} Options to control the behavior of anchors generated from Markdown headings remarkRehypeOptions object undefined Makes it possible to pass custom remark-rehype options . hooks MarkdownHooks object Make it possible to customize the MDX loader behavior with callbacks or built-in options. hooks.onBrokenMarkdownLinks ReportingSeverity | OnBrokenMarkdownLinksFunction 'warn' Hook to customize the behavior when encountering a broken Markdown link URL. With the callback function, you can return a new link URL, or alter the link mdast node . hooks.onBrokenMarkdownImages ReportingSeverity | OnBrokenMarkdownImagesFunction 'throw' Hook to customize the behavior when encountering a broken Markdown image URL. With the callback function, you can return a new image URL, or alter the image mdast node . customFields Docusaurus guards docusaurus.config.js from unknown fields. To add a custom field, define it on customFields . Type: Object docusaurus.config.js export default { customFields : { admin : 'endi' , superman : 'lol' , } , } ; Attempting to add unknown fields in the config will lead to errors during build time: Error: The field ( s ) 'foo' , 'bar' are not recognized in docusaurus.config.js staticDirectories An array of paths, relative to the site's directory or absolute. Files under these paths will be copied to the build output as-is. Type: string[] Example: docusaurus.config.js export default { staticDirectories : [ 'static' ] , } ; headTags An array of tags that will be inserted in the HTML <head> . The values must be objects that contain two properties; tagName and attributes . tagName must be a string that determines the tag being created; eg "link" . attributes must be an attribute-value map. Type: { tagName: string; attributes: Object; }[] Example: docusaurus.config.js export default { headTags : [ { tagName : 'link' , attributes : { rel : 'icon' , href : '/img/docusaurus.png' , } , } , ] , } ; This would become <link rel="icon" href="img/docusaurus.png" /> in the generated HTML. scripts An array of scripts to load. The values can be either strings or plain objects of attribute-value maps. The <script> tags will be inserted in the HTML <head> . If you use a plain object, the only required attribute is src , and any other attributes are permitted (each one should have boolean/string values). Note that <script> added here are render-blocking, so you might want to add async: true / defer: true to the objects. Type: (string | Object)[] Example: docusaurus.config.js export default { scripts : [ // String format. 'https://docusaurus.io/script.js' , // Object format. { src : 'https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/clipboard.js/2.0.0/clipboard.min.js' , async : true , } , ] , } ; stylesheets An array of CSS sources to load. The values can be either strings or plain objects of attribute-value maps. The <link> tags will be inserted in the HTML <head> . If you use an object, the only required attribute is href , and any other attributes are permitted (each one should have boolean/string values). Type: (string | Object)[] Example: docusaurus.config.js export default { stylesheets : [ // String format. 'https://docusaurus.io/style.css' , // Object format. { href : 'http://mydomain.com/style.css' , } , ] , } ; info By default, the <link> tags will have rel="stylesheet" , but you can explicitly add a custom rel value to inject any kind of <link> tag, not necessarily stylesheets. clientModules An array of client modules to load globally on your site. Example: docusaurus.config.js export default { clientModules : [ './mySiteGlobalJs.js' , './mySiteGlobalCss.css' ] , } ; ssrTemplate An HTML template written in Eta's syntax that will be used to render your application. This can be used to set custom attributes on the body tags, additional meta tags, customize the viewport , etc. Please note that Docusaurus will rely on the template to be correctly structured in order to function properly, once you do customize it, you will have to make sure that your template is compliant with the requirements from upstream. Type: string Example: docusaurus.config.js export default { ssrTemplate : ` <!DOCTYPE html> <html <%~ it.htmlAttributes %>> <head> <meta charset="UTF-8"> <meta name="generator" content="Docusaurus v<%= it.version %>"> <% it.metaAttributes.forEach((metaAttribute) => { %> <%~ metaAttribute %> <% }); %> <%~ it.headTags %> <% it.stylesheets.forEach((stylesheet) => { %> <link rel="stylesheet" href="<%= it.baseUrl %><%= stylesheet %>" /> <% }); %> <% it.scripts.forEach((script) => { %> <link rel="preload" href="<%= it.baseUrl %><%= script %>" as="script"> <% }); %> </head> <body <%~ it.bodyAttributes %>> <%~ it.preBodyTags %> <div id="__docusaurus"> <%~ it.appHtml %> </div> <% it.scripts.forEach((script) => { %> <script src="<%= it.baseUrl %><%= script %>"></script> <% }); %> <%~ it.postBodyTags %> </body> </html> ` , } ; titleDelimiter Type: string Will be used as title delimiter in the generated <title> tag. Example: docusaurus.config.js export default { titleDelimiter : '🦖' , // Defaults to `|` } ; baseUrlIssueBanner Type: boolean When enabled, will show a banner in case your site can't load its CSS or JavaScript files, which is a very common issue, often related to a wrong baseUrl in site config. Example: docusaurus.config.js export default { baseUrlIssueBanner : true , // Defaults to `true` } ; warning This banner needs to inline CSS / JS in case all asset loading fails due to wrong base URL. If you have a strict Content Security Policy , you should rather disable it. 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Explore Stack Internal (I Thessalonians 1:3) A question about prepositions at the end of this verse (comment added) Ask Question Asked today Modified today Viewed 28 times 1 There are many variations on how the end of this verse is translated. (It seems that the meaning is changed, depending on the textual version used.) Here is the KJV: KJV I Thessalonians 1:3 Remembering without ceasing your work of faith, and labour of love, and patience of hope in our Lord Jesus Christ, in the sight of God and our Father [Some versions use "by" for both emboldened words; others use "before" for the second emboldened occurrence.] 1 Thessalonians 1:3 (prepositions in question at the end of the verse) 3588 [e] tou τοῦ of the Art-GMS 2962 [e] Kyriou Κυρίου Lord N-GMS 1473 [e] hēmōn ἡμῶν of us PPro-G1P 2424 [e] Iēsou Ἰησοῦ Jesus N-GMS 5547 [e] Christou Χριστοῦ , Christ N-GMS 1715 [e] emprosthen ἔμπροσθεν before Prep 3588 [e] tou τοῦ the Art-GMS 2316 [e] Theou Θεοῦ God N-GMS 2532 [e] kai καὶ and Conj 3962 [e] Patros Πατρὸς Father N-GMS 1473 [e] hēmōn ἡμῶν , of us PPro-G1P Does anyone know whether one usage is more correct in the Greek than the other? grammar pauline-epistles 1-thessalonians bible-versions greek-language Share Improve this question Follow edited 9 hours ago asked 11 hours ago Don 439 11 11 bronze badges 1 There was a post the other day about pronouns. @Paul gave an answer and also replied to two of my comments there about pronouns. Greek pronouns for me have been difficult to understand. This verse is one I hope to study further, since it mentions faith, hope and love as does I Corinthians 13. However, the difference in pronouns is confusing to me. Don – Don 2026-01-12 23:26:13 +00:00 Commented 9 hours ago Add a comment | 1 Answer 1 Sorted by: Reset to default Highest score (default) Date modified (newest first) Date created (oldest first) 2 Ok, not all these words listed by the OP in the last part of 1 Thess 1:3 are propositions - only one is. Let be more specific. The last half of the verse reads (with my translation): ... καὶ τῆς ὑπομονῆςτῆς ἐλπίδος τοῦ Κυρίου ἡμῶν Ἰησοῦ Χριστοῦ· ἔμπροσθεν τοῦ Θεοῦ καὶ πατρὸς ἡμῶν· = ... and of the endurance of the hope of the Lord of us of Jesus Christ; before the God and Father of us. In more idiomatic English this is: and of the endurance of the hope of our Lord Jesus Christ, before our God and Father. Specifically, these words mean: καὶ = conjunction = "and" τῆς = article Genitive feminine singular = "of the" τοῦ = article Genitive masculine singular = "of the" ἡμῶν = pronoun plural, = "of us" or "our" ἔμπροσθεν = preposition = in front of", "before", in the sight of", literally, "in the face of" (but never translated this way). ὑπομονῆς = endurance, perseverance, patience, patient enduring [I have bolded the only preposition in the text.] This verse is particularly simple to translate. Share Improve this answer Follow answered 8 hours ago Dottard 145k 8 8 gold badges 63 63 silver badges 206 206 bronze badges 2 God bless you. (ἔμπροσθεν...I saw an obscure version, maybe two obscure verses actually, that used language like "in the sight of, in the face of"! And, that's the main reason I asked the question!) Don – Don 2026-01-13 00:32:08 +00:00 Commented 8 hours ago BibleHub: Anderson NT (in the sight of), Godbey NT (before), Haweis NT (before), Mace NT (of which God is our witness), Weymouth NT (in the presence of), Worrell NT (before ), Worsley NT (before) Don – Don 2026-01-13 00:44:42 +00:00 Commented 8 hours ago Add a comment | Your Answer Reminder: Answers generated by AI tools are not allowed due to Biblical Hermeneutics Stack Exchange's artificial intelligence policy Thanks for contributing an answer to Biblical Hermeneutics Stack Exchange! Please be sure to answer the question . Provide details and share your research! But avoid … Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers. Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience. To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers . 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https://dev.to/inboryn_99399f96579fcd705/kubernetes-namespace-isolation-why-its-not-a-security-feature-and-what-actually-is-2nf1 | Kubernetes Namespace Isolation: Why It's Not a Security Feature (And What Actually Is) - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse inboryn Posted on Jan 12 Kubernetes Namespace Isolation: Why It's Not a Security Feature (And What Actually Is) # kubernetes # devops # webdev If you've been managing Kubernetes clusters for any length of time, you've probably heard it: "Use namespaces for security isolation." It's passed around as conventional wisdom in DevOps circles. But here's the uncomfortable truth—it's a dangerous misconception that's leaving production systems vulnerable. Namespaces are not a security boundary. Let me repeat that: Kubernetes namespaces provide logical separation, not security isolation. Understanding this distinction could be the difference between a compromised cluster and a secure one. The Myth: Namespaces as Security Boundaries Most engineers believe that namespaces create security barriers between workloads. Different teams get their own namespace, applications are isolated, problems in one namespace won't affect another. But here's the problem: Workloads in different namespaces can communicate with each other freely by default. An attacker who gains access to any pod can send traffic to pods in other namespaces using simple DNS: service.namespace.svc.cluster.local. Why Namespaces Don't Work as Security Boundaries No Network Isolation by Default Without Network Policies, all pods can talk to all other pods, regardless of namespace. A compromised pod can communicate with the database in another namespace. This is the default behavior—a security nightmare if you're relying on namespaces for isolation. Shared API Server Access Every pod has access to the Kubernetes API server. If a pod is compromised with overly permissive RBAC rules, an attacker can enumerate and access resources across namespaces. Shared Kernel All pods on a node share the same Linux kernel. Without Pod Security Standards, a container breakout could give access to the entire node—all namespaces included. Shared etcd A single compromise could expose all cluster data across all namespaces. What Actually Provides Security in Kubernetes If namespaces aren't the answer, what is? Here's the real security stack you need: Network Policies (Non-Negotiable) Network Policies control traffic between pods. This is your primary defense. Always implement network policies for production workloads. RBAC (Role-Based Access Control) RBAC controls what identities can do with the Kubernetes API. Follow the principle of least privilege: workloads should have minimum permissions needed. Pod Security Standards Pod Security Standards enforce security constraints: Prevent privileged containers Block root execution Restrict capabilities Enforce read-only root filesystems Secrets Management Don't store secrets in configmaps. Use dedicated secret management like HashiCorp Vault, AWS Secrets Manager, or Sealed Secrets. Network Encryption Enable TLS for inter-pod communication Encrypt etcd at rest Use TLS for API server communication Container Image Security Use minimal base images Scan for vulnerabilities Run as non-root The Bottom Line Namespaces are a convenient organizational tool. They help you group workloads and manage resources. But security? That's something else entirely. If you're using namespaces as your security boundary, treat this as urgent. Start implementing Network Policies today. Audit your RBAC rules. Segregate sensitive workloads. Enforce Pod Security Standards. 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How We Use Your Data We use your data to provide, support, personalize and develop our Services. How we use your personal data will depend on which Services you use, how you use those Services and the choices you make in your settings . We may use your personal data to improve, develop, and provide products and Services, develop and train artificial intelligence (AI) models, develop, provide, and personalize our Services, and gain insights with the help of AI, automated systems, and inferences, so that our Services can be more relevant and useful to you and others. You can review LinkedIn's Responsible AI principles here and learn more about our approach to generative AI here . Learn more about the inferences we may make, including as to your age and gender and how we use them. 2.1 Services Our Services help you connect with others, find and be found for work and business opportunities, stay informed, get training and be more productive. We use your data to authorize access to our Services and honor your settings. Stay Connected Our Services allow you to stay in touch and up to date with colleagues, partners, clients, and other professional contacts. To do so, you can “connect” with the professionals who you choose, and who also wish to “connect” with you. Subject to your and their settings , when you connect with other Members, you will be able to search each others’ connections in order to exchange professional opportunities. We use data about you (such as your profile, profiles you have viewed or data provided through address book uploads or partner integrations) to help others find your profile, suggest connections for you and others (e.g. Members who share your contacts or job experiences) and enable you to invite others to become a Member and connect with you. You can also opt-in to allow us to use your precise location or proximity to others for certain tasks (e.g. to suggest other nearby Members for you to connect with, calculate the commute to a new job, or notify your connections that you are at a professional event). It is your choice whether to invite someone to our Services, send a connection request, or allow another Member to become your connection. When you invite someone to connect with you, your invitation will include your network and basic profile information (e.g., name, profile photo, job title, region). We will send invitation reminders to the person you invited. You can choose whether or not to share your own list of connections with your connections. Visitors have choices about how we use their data. Stay Informed Our Services allow you to stay informed about news, events and ideas regarding professional topics you care about, and from professionals you respect. Our Services also allow you to improve your professional skills, or learn new ones. We use the data we have about you (e.g., data you provide, data we collect from your engagement with our Services and inferences we make from the data we have about you), to personalize our Services for you, such as by recommending or ranking relevant content and conversations on our Services. We also use the data we have about you to suggest skills you could add to your profile and skills that you might need to pursue your next opportunity. So, if you let us know that you are interested in a new skill (e.g., by watching a learning video), we will use this information to personalize content in your feed, suggest that you follow certain Members on our site, or suggest related learning content to help you towards that new skill. We use your content, activity and other data, including your name and photo, to provide notices to your network and others. For example, subject to your settings , we may notify others that you have updated your profile, posted content, took a social action , used a feature, made new connections or were mentioned in the news . Career Our Services allow you to explore careers, evaluate educational opportunities, and seek out, and be found for, career opportunities. Your profile can be found by those looking to hire (for a job or a specific task ) or be hired by you. We will use your data to recommend jobs and show you and others relevant professional contacts (e.g., who work at a company, in an industry, function or location or have certain skills and connections). You can signal that you are interested in changing jobs and share information with recruiters. We will use your data to recommend jobs to you and you to recruiters. We may use automated systems to provide content and recommendations to help make our Services more relevant to our Members, Visitors and customers. Keeping your profile accurate and up-to-date may help you better connect to others and to opportunities through our Services. Productivity Our Services allow you to collaborate with colleagues, search for potential clients, customers, partners and others to do business with. Our Services allow you to communicate with other Members and schedule and prepare meetings with them. If your settings allow, we scan messages to provide “bots” or similar tools that facilitate tasks such as scheduling meetings, drafting responses, summarizing messages or recommending next steps. Learn more . 2.2 Premium Services Our premium Services help paying users to search for and contact Members through our Services, such as searching for and contacting job candidates, sales leads and co-workers, manage talent and promote content. We sell premium Services that provide our customers and subscribers with customized-search functionality and tools (including messaging and activity alerts) as part of our talent, marketing and sales solutions. Customers can export limited information from your profile, such as name, headline, current company, current title, and general location (e.g., Dublin), such as to manage sales leads or talent, unless you opt-out . We do not provide contact information to customers as part of these premium Services without your consent. Premium Services customers can store information they have about you in our premium Services, such as a resume or contact information or sales history. The data stored about you by these customers is subject to the policies of those customers. Other enterprise Services and features that use your data include TeamLink and LinkedIn Pages (e.g., content analytics and followers). 2.3 Communications We contact you and enable communications between Members. We offer settings to control what messages you receive and how often you receive some types of messages. We will contact you through email, mobile phone, notices posted on our websites or apps, messages to your LinkedIn inbox, and other ways through our Services, including text messages and push notifications. We will send you messages about the availability of our Services, security, or other service-related issues. We also send messages about how to use our Services, network updates, reminders, job suggestions and promotional messages from us and our partners. You may change your communication preferences at any time. Please be aware that you cannot opt out of receiving service messages from us, including security and legal notices. We also enable communications between you and others through our Services, including for example invitations , InMail , groups and messages between connections. 2.4 Advertising We serve you tailored ads both on and off our Services. We offer you choices regarding personalized ads, but you cannot opt-out of seeing non-personalized ads. We target (and measure the performance of) ads to Members, Visitors and others both on and off our Services directly or through a variety of partners, using the following data, whether separately or combined: Data collected by advertising technologies on and off our Services using pixels, ad tags (e.g., when an advertiser installs a LinkedIn tag on their website), cookies, and other device identifiers; Member-provided information (e.g., profile, contact information, title and industry); Data from your use of our Services (e.g., search history, feed, content you read, who you follow or is following you, connections, groups participation, page visits, videos you watch, clicking on an ad, etc.), including as described in Section 1.3; Information from advertising partners , vendors and publishers ; and Information inferred from data described above (e.g., using job titles from a profile to infer industry, seniority, and compensation bracket; using graduation dates to infer age or using first names or pronoun usage to infer gender; using your feed activity to infer your interests; or using device data to recognize you as a Member). Learn more about the inferences we make and how they may be used for advertising. Learn more about the ad technologies we use and our advertising services and partners. You can learn more about our compliance with laws in the Designated Countries or the UK in our European Regional Privacy Notice . We will show you ads called sponsored content which look similar to non-sponsored content, except that they are labeled as advertising (e.g., as “ad” or “sponsored”). If you take a social action (such as like, comment or share) on these ads, your action is associated with your name and viewable by others, including the advertiser. Subject to your settings , if you take a social action on the LinkedIn Services, that action may be mentioned with related ads. For example, when you like a company we may include your name and photo when their sponsored content is shown. Ad Choices You have choices regarding our uses of certain categories of data to show you more relevant ads. Member settings can be found here . For Visitors, the setting is here . Info to Ad Providers We do not share your personal data with any non-Affiliated third-party advertisers or ad networks except for: (i) hashed IDs or device identifiers (to the extent they are personal data in some countries); (ii) with your separate permission (e.g., in a lead generation form) or (iii) data already visible to any users of the Services (e.g., profile). However, if you view or click on an ad on or off our Services, the ad provider will get a signal that someone visited the page that displayed the ad, and they may, through the use of mechanisms such as cookies, determine it is you. Advertising partners can associate personal data collected by the advertiser directly from you with hashed IDs or device identifiers received from us. We seek to contractually require such advertising partners to obtain your explicit, opt-in consent before doing so where legally required, and in such instances, we take steps to ensure that consent has been provided before processing data from them. 2.5 Marketing We promote our Services to you and others. In addition to advertising our Services, we use Members’ data and content for invitations and communications promoting membership and network growth, engagement and our Services, such as by showing your connections that you have used a feature on our Services. 2.6 Developing Services and Research We develop our Services and conduct research Service Development We use data, including public feedback, to conduct research and development for our Services in order to provide you and others with a better, more intuitive and personalized experience, drive membership growth and engagement on our Services, and help connect professionals to each other and to economic opportunity. Other Research We seek to create economic opportunity for Members of the global workforce and to help them be more productive and successful. We use the personal data available to us to research social, economic and workplace trends, such as jobs availability and skills needed for these jobs and policies that help bridge the gap in various industries and geographic areas. In some cases, we work with trusted third parties to perform this research, under controls that are designed to protect your privacy. We may also make public data available to researchers to enable assessment of the safety and legal compliance of our Services. We publish or allow others to publish economic insights, presented as aggregated data rather than personal data. Surveys Polls and surveys are conducted by us and others through our Services. You are not obligated to respond to polls or surveys, and you have choices about the information you provide. You may opt-out of survey invitations. 2.7 Customer Support We use data to help you and fix problems. We use data (which can include your communications) to investigate, respond to and resolve complaints and for Service issues (e.g., bugs). 2.8 Insights That Do Not Identify You We use data to generate insights that do not identify you. We use your data to perform analytics to produce and share insights that do not identify you. For example, we may use your data to generate statistics about our Members, their profession or industry, to calculate ad impressions served or clicked on (e.g., for basic business reporting to support billing and budget management or, subject to your settings , for reports to advertisers who may use them to inform their advertising campaigns), to show Members' information about engagement with a post or LinkedIn Page , to publish visitor demographics for a Service or create demographic workforce insights, or to understand usage of our services. 2.9 Security and Investigations We use data for security, fraud prevention and investigations. We and our Affiliates, including Microsoft, may use your data (including your communications) for security purposes or to prevent or investigate possible fraud or other violations of the law, our User Agreement and/or attempts to harm our Members, Visitors, company, Affiliates, or others. Key Terms Social Action E.g. like, comment, follow, share Partners Partners include ad networks, exchanges and others 3. How We Share Information 3.1 Our Services Any data that you include on your profile and any content you post or social action (e.g., likes, follows, comments, shares) you take on our Services will be seen by others, consistent with your settings. Profile Your profile is fully visible to all Members and customers of our Services. Subject to your settings , it can also be visible to others on or off of our Services (e.g., Visitors to our Services or users of third-party search tools). As detailed in our Help Center , your settings, degree of connection with the viewing Member, the subscriptions they may have, their usage of our Services , access channels and search types (e.g., by name or by keyword) impact the availability of your profile and whether they can view certain fields in your profile. Posts, Likes, Follows, Comments, Messages Our Services allow viewing and sharing information including through posts, likes, follows and comments. When you share an article or a post (e.g., an update, image, video or article) publicly it can be viewed by everyone and re-shared anywhere (subject to your settings ). Members, Visitors and others will be able to find and see your publicly-shared content, including your name (and photo if you have provided one). In a group , posts are visible to others according to group type. For example, posts in private groups are visible to others in the group and posts in public groups are visible publicly. Your membership in groups is public and part of your profile, but you can change visibility in your settings . Any information you share through companies’ or other organizations’ pages on our Services will be viewable by those organizations and others who view those pages' content. When you follow a person or organization, you are visible to others and that “page owner” as a follower. We let senders know when you act on their message, subject to your settings where applicable. Subject to your settings , we let a Member know when you view their profile. We also give you choices about letting organizations know when you've viewed their Page. When you like or re-share or comment on another’s content (including ads), others will be able to view these “social actions” and associate it with you (e.g., your name, profile and photo if you provided it). Your employer can see how you use Services they provided for your work (e.g. as a recruiter or sales agent) and related information. We will not show them your job searches or personal messages. Enterprise Accounts Your employer may offer you access to our enterprise Services such as Recruiter, Sales Navigator, LinkedIn Learning or our advertising Campaign Manager. Your employer can review and manage your use of such enterprise Services. Depending on the enterprise Service, before you use such Service, we will ask for permission to share with your employer relevant data from your profile or use of our non-enterprise Services. For example, users of Sales Navigator will be asked to share their “social selling index”, a score calculated in part based on their personal account activity. We understand that certain activities such as job hunting and personal messages are sensitive, and so we do not share those with your employer unless you choose to share it with them through our Services (for example, by applying for a new position in the same company or mentioning your job hunting in a message to a co-worker through our Services). Subject to your settings , when you use workplace tools and services (e.g., interactive employee directory tools) certain of your data may also be made available to your employer or be connected with information we receive from your employer to enable these tools and services. 3.2 Communication Archival Regulated Members may need to store communications outside of our Service. Some Members (or their employers) need, for legal or professional compliance, to archive their communications and social media activity, and will use services of others to provide these archival services. We enable archiving of messages by and to those Members outside of our Services. For example, a financial advisor needs to archive communications with her clients through our Services in order to maintain her professional financial advisor license. 3.3 Others’ Services You may link your account with others’ services so that they can look up your contacts’ profiles, post your shares on such platforms, or enable you to start conversations with your connections on such platforms. Excerpts from your profile will also appear on the services of others. Subject to your settings , other services may look up your profile. When you opt to link your account with other services, personal data (e.g., your name, title, and company) will become available to them. The sharing and use of that personal data will be described in, or linked to, a consent screen when you opt to link the accounts. For example, you may link your Twitter or WeChat account to share content from our Services into these other services, or your email provider may give you the option to upload your LinkedIn contacts into its own service. Third-party services have their own privacy policies, and you may be giving them permission to use your data in ways we would not. You may revoke the link with such accounts. The information you make available to others in our Services (e.g., information from your profile, your posts, your engagement with the posts, or message to Pages) may be available to them on other services . For example, search tools, mail and calendar applications, or talent and lead managers may show a user limited profile data (subject to your settings ), and social media management tools or other platforms may display your posts. The information retained on these services may not reflect updates you make on LinkedIn. 3.4 Related Services We share your data across our different Services and LinkedIn affiliated entities. We will share your personal data with our Affiliates to provide and develop our Services. For example, we may refer a query to Bing in some instances, such as where you'd benefit from a more up to date response in a chat experience. Subject to our European Regional Privacy Notice , we may also share with our Affiliates, including Microsoft, your (1) publicly-shared content (such as your public LinkedIn posts) to provide or develop their services and (2) personal data to improve, provide or develop their advertising services. Where allowed , we may combine information internally across the different Services covered by this Privacy Policy to help our Services be more relevant and useful to you and others. For example, we may personalize your feed or job recommendations based on your learning history. 3.5 Service Providers We may use others to help us with our Services. We use others to help us provide our Services (e.g., maintenance, analysis, audit, payments, fraud detection, customer support, marketing and development). They will have access to your information (e.g., the contents of a customer support request) as reasonably necessary to perform these tasks on our behalf and are obligated not to disclose or use it for other purposes. If you purchase a Service from us, we may use a payments service provider who may separately collect information about you (e.g., for fraud prevention or to comply with legal obligations). 3.6 Legal Disclosures We may need to share your data when we believe it’s required by law or to help protect the rights and safety of you, us or others. It is possible that we will need to disclose information about you when required by law, subpoena, or other legal process or if we have a good faith belief that disclosure is reasonably necessary to (1) investigate, prevent or take action regarding suspected or actual illegal activities or to assist government enforcement agencies; (2) enforce our agreements with you; (3) investigate and defend ourselves against any third-party claims or allegations; (4) protect the security or integrity of our Services or the products or services of our Affiliates (such as by sharing with companies facing similar threats); or (5) exercise or protect the rights and safety of LinkedIn, our Members, personnel or others. We attempt to notify Members about legal demands for their personal data when appropriate in our judgment, unless prohibited by law or court order or when the request is an emergency. We may dispute such demands when we believe, in our discretion, that the requests are overbroad, vague or lack proper authority, but we do not promise to challenge every demand. To learn more see our Data Request Guidelines and Transparency Report . 3.7 Change in Control or Sale We may share your data when our business is sold to others, but it must continue to be used in accordance with this Privacy Policy. We can also share your personal data as part of a sale, merger or change in control, or in preparation for any of these events. Any other entity which buys us or part of our business will have the right to continue to use your data, but only in the manner set out in this Privacy Policy unless you agree otherwise. 4. Your Choices & Obligations 4.1 Data Retention We keep most of your personal data for as long as your account is open. We generally retain your personal data as long as you keep your account open or as needed to provide you Services. This includes data you or others provided to us and data generated or inferred from your use of our Services. Even if you only use our Services when looking for a new job every few years, we will retain your information and keep your profile open, unless you close your account. In some cases we choose to retain certain information (e.g., insights about Services use) in a depersonalized or aggregated form. 4.2 Rights to Access and Control Your Personal Data You can access or delete your personal data. You have many choices about how your data is collected, used and shared. We provide many choices about the collection, use and sharing of your data, from deleting or correcting data you include in your profile and controlling the visibility of your posts to advertising opt-outs and communication controls. We offer you settings to control and manage the personal data we have about you. For personal data that we have about you, you can: Delete Data : You can ask us to erase or delete all or some of your personal data (e.g., if it is no longer necessary to provide Services to you). Change or Correct Data : You can edit some of your personal data through your account. You can also ask us to change, update or fix your data in certain cases, particularly if it’s inaccurate. Object to, or Limit or Restrict, Use of Data : You can ask us to stop using all or some of your personal data (e.g., if we have no legal right to keep using it) or to limit our use of it (e.g., if your personal data is inaccurate or unlawfully held). Right to Access and/or Take Your Data : You can ask us for a copy of your personal data and can ask for a copy of personal data you provided in machine readable form. Visitors can learn more about how to make these requests here . You may also contact us using the contact information below, and we will consider your request in accordance with applicable laws. Residents in the Designated Countries and the UK , and other regions , may have additional rights under their laws. 4.3 Account Closure We keep some of your data even after you close your account. If you choose to close your LinkedIn account, your personal data will generally stop being visible to others on our Services within 24 hours. We generally delete closed account information within 30 days of account closure, except as noted below. We retain your personal data even after you have closed your account if reasonably necessary to comply with our legal obligations (including law enforcement requests), meet regulatory requirements, resolve disputes, maintain security, prevent fraud and abuse (e.g., if we have restricted your account for breach of our Professional Community Policies ), enforce our User Agreement, or fulfill your request to "unsubscribe" from further messages from us. We will retain de-personalized information after your account has been closed. Information you have shared with others (e.g., through InMail, updates or group posts) will remain visible after you close your account or delete the information from your own profile or mailbox, and we do not control data that other Members have copied out of our Services. Groups content and ratings or review content associated with closed accounts will show an unknown user as the source. Your profile may continue to be displayed in the services of others (e.g., search tools) until they refresh their cache. 5. Other Important Information 5.1. Security We monitor for and try to prevent security breaches. Please use the security features available through our Services. We implement security safeguards designed to protect your data, such as HTTPS. We regularly monitor our systems for possible vulnerabilities and attacks. However, we cannot warrant the security of any information that you send us. There is no guarantee that data may not be accessed, disclosed, altered, or destroyed by breach of any of our physical, technical, or managerial safeguards. 5.2. Cross-Border Data Transfers We store and use your data outside your country. We process data both inside and outside of the United States and rely on legally-provided mechanisms to lawfully transfer data across borders. Learn more . Countries where we process data may have laws which are different from, and potentially not as protective as, the laws of your own country. 5.3 Lawful Bases for Processing We have lawful bases to collect, use and share data about you. You have choices about our use of your data. At any time, you can withdraw consent you have provided by going to settings. We will only collect and process personal data about you where we have lawful bases. Lawful bases include consent (where you have given consent), contract (where processing is necessary for the performance of a contract with you (e.g., to deliver the LinkedIn Services you have requested) and “legitimate interests.” Learn more . Where we rely on your consent to process personal data, you have the right to withdraw or decline your consent at any time and where we rely on legitimate interests, you have the right to object. Learn More . If you have any questions about the lawful bases upon which we collect and use your personal data, please contact our Data Protection Officer here . If you're located in one of the Designated Countries or the UK, you can learn more about our lawful bases for processing in our European Regional Privacy Notice . 5.4. Direct Marketing and Do Not Track Signals Our statements regarding direct marketing and “do not track” signals. We currently do not share personal data with third parties for their direct marketing purposes without your permission. Learn more about this and about our response to “do not track” signals. 5.5. Contact Information You can contact us or use other options to resolve any complaints. If you have questions or complaints regarding this Policy, please first contact LinkedIn online. You can also reach us by physical mail . If contacting us does not resolve your complaint, you have more options . Residents in the Designated Countries and other regions may also have the right to contact our Data Protection Officer here . If this does not resolve your complaint, Residents in the Designated Countries and other regions may have more options under their laws. Key Terms Consent Where we process data based on consent, we will ask for your explicit consent. You may withdraw your consent at any time, but that will not affect the lawfulness of the processing of your personal data prior to such withdrawal. Where we rely on contract, we will ask that you agree to the processing of personal data that is necessary for entering into or performance of your contract with us. We will rely on legitimate interests as a basis for data processing where the processing of your data is not overridden by your interests or fundamental rights and freedoms. 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https://forem.dev/contact | Forem.dev Migration - Forem Core Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account Forem Core Close Forem.dev Migration We have designated core.forem.com as the new space for news and discussion with regards to the Forem project . We have been through a journey with many iterations and a fresh start seemed ideal. Because forem.dev was never well managed, we felt like it was not worth entirely preserving it. However, if there is any content you might be specifically interested in, you can contact yo@forem.com and we will try to help provide it. Please feel free to post on core.forem.com if you have any questions about the project. For more info, check out our initial post: A new space for discussions surrounding the Forem core open source project Ben Halpern for The DEV Team ・ May 8 #announcement We are happy to have you on this open source journey! 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Forem Core — Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Home About Contact Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . Forem Core © 2016 - 2026. Community building community Log in Create account | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_96 | November 2024 (version 1.96) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 November 2024 (version 1.96) Update 1.96.1 : The update addresses these issues and enables the GitHub Copilot Free plan . Update 1.96.2 : The update addresses these issues . Update 1.96.3 : The update addresses these issues . Update 1.96.4 : The update addresses these issues . Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the November 2024 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: GitHub Copilot Free - Use Copilot for free with the GitHub Copilot Free plan Overtype mode - Switch between overwrite or insert mode in the editor Add imports on paste - Automatically add missing TS/JS imports when pasting code Test coverage - Quickly filter which code is covered by a specific test Move views - Easily move views between the Primary and Secondary Side Bar Terminal ligatures - Use ligatures in the terminal Extension allow list - Configure which extensions can be installed in your organization Debug with Copilot - Use copilot-debug terminal command to start a debugging session Chat context - Add symbols and folders as context Chat and Edits Move from chat to Copilot Edits - Switch to Copilot Edits to apply code suggestions from Chat If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. GitHub Copilot GitHub Copilot Free plan We're excited to announce an all new free tier for GitHub Copilot . Sign up for the GitHub Copilot Free plan , and all you need is a GitHub account. You are entitled to a number of completions and chat interactions per month, which reset each month. You can sign up directly from within VS Code. Follow the steps in the Copilot Setup guide . Learn more about the Copilot Free plan details and conditions . Copilot Edits Last milestone, we introduced Copilot Edits (currently in preview), which allows you to quickly edit multiple files at once using natural language. Since then, we've continued to iterate on the experience. You can try out Copilot Edits by opening the Copilot menu in the Command Center, and then selecting Open Copilot Edits, or by triggering . Progress and editor controls Copilot Edits can make multiple changes across different files. You can now more clearly see its progress as edits stream in. And with the editor overlay controls, you can easily cycle through all changes and accept or discard them. Move chat session to Copilot Edits You might use the Chat view to explore some ideas for making changes to your code. Instead of applying individual code blocks, you can now move the chat session to Copilot Edits to apply all code suggestions from the session. Working set suggested files In Copilot Edits, the working set determines the files that Copilot Edits can suggest changes for. To help you add relevant files to the working set, for a Git repo, Copilot Edits can now suggest additional files based on the files you've already added. For example, Copilot Edits will suggest files that are often changed together with the files you've already added. Copilot shows suggested files alongside the Add Files button in the working set. You can also select Add Files and then select Related Files to choose from a list of suggested files. Restore Edit sessions after restart Edit sessions are now fully restored after restarting VS Code. This includes the working set, acceptance state, as well as the file state of all past edit steps. Add to working set from Explorer, Search, and editor You can add files to your Copilot Edits working set with the new Add File to Copilot Edits context menu action for search results in the Search view and for files in the Explorer view. Additionally, you can also attach a text selection to Copilot Edits from the editor context menu. Debugging with Copilot Configuring debugging can be tricky, especially when you're working with a new project or language. This milestone, we're introducing a new copilot-debug terminal command to help you debug your programs using VS Code. You can use it by prefixing the command that you would normally run with copilot-debug . For example, if you normally run your program using the command python foo.py , you can now run copilot-debug python foo.py to start a debugging session. After your program exits, you are given options to rerun your program or to view, save, or regenerate the VS Code launch configuration that was used to debug your program. Theme: Codesong (preview on vscode.dev ) Tasks Support Copilot's debugging features, including copilot-debug and the /startDebugging intent, now generate preLaunchTask s as needed for code that needs a compilation step before debugging. This is often the case for compiled languages, such as Rust and C++. Add Context We’ve added new ways to include symbols and folders as context in Copilot Chat and Copilot Edits, making it easier to reference relevant information during your workflow. Symbols Symbols can now easily be added to Copilot Chat and Copilot Edits by dragging and dropping them from the Outline View or Breadcrumbs into the Chat view. We’ve also introduced symbol completion in the chat input. By typing # followed by the symbol name, you’ll see suggestions for symbols from files you've recently worked on. To reference symbols across your entire project, you can use #sym to open a global symbols picker. Folders Folders can now be added as context by dragging them from the Explorer, Breadcrumbs, or other views into Copilot Chat. When a folder is dragged into Copilot Edits, all files within the folder are included in the working set. Copilot usage graph VS Code extensions can use the VS Code API to build on the capabilities of Copilot . You can now see a graph of an extension's Copilot usage in the Runtime Status view. This graph shows the number of chat requests that were made by the extension over the last 30 days. Custom instructions for commit message generation Copilot can help you generate commit messages based on the changes you've made. This milestone, we added support for custom instructions when generating a commit message. For example, if your commit messages need to follow a specific format, you can describe this in the custom instructions. You can use the github.copilot.chat.commitMessageGeneration.instructions setting to either specify the custom instructions or specify a file from your workspace that contains the custom instructions. These instructions are appended to the prompt that is used to generate the commit message. Get more information on how to use custom instructions . Inline Chat This milestone, we have further improved the user experience of Inline Chat: we made the progress reporting more subtle, while streaming in changes squiggles are disabled, and detected commands are rendered more nicely. Also, we have continued to improve our pseudo-code detection and now show a hint that you can continue with Inline Chat when a line is mostly natural language. This functionality lets you type pseudo code in the editor, which is then used as a prompt for Inline Chat. You can also trigger this flow by pressing . Additionally, there is a new, experimental, setting to make an Inline Chat hint appear on empty lines. This setting can be enabled via inlineChat.lineEmptyHint . By default, this setting is disabled. Terminal Chat Terminal Inline Chat has a fresh coat of paint that brings the look and feel much closer to editor Inline Chat: Here are some other improvements of note that were made: The layout and positioning of the widget is improved and generally behaves better There's a model picker The buttons on the bottom are now more consistent Performance improvements for @workspace When you use @workspace to ask Copilot about your currently opened workspace, we first need to narrow the workspace down into a set of relevant code snippets that we can hand off to Copilot as context. If your workspaces is backed by a GitHub repo, we can find these relevant snippets quickly by using Github code search. However, as the code search index tracks the main branch of your repository, we couldn't rely on it for local changes or when on a branch. This milestone, we've worked bring the speed benefits of Github search to branches and pull requests. This means that we now search both the remote index based on your repo's main branch, along with searching any locally changed files. We then merge these results together, giving Copilot a fast and up to date set of snippets to work with. You can read more about Github code search and how to enable it . Accessibility Code Action accessibility signals Some code actions can take a long time to complete, for example a quick fix that calls an external service to generate image alt text. It might not be obvious when they were triggered or when they're fully applied. Therefore, we added accessibility signals to indicate that a code action was triggered or applied. You can enable these signals with the accessibility.signals.codeActionTriggered and accessibility.signals.codeActionApplied settings. Automatic focus management in the REPL We introduced a new setting to improve accessibility when working in the REPL. With accessibility.replEditor.autoFocusReplExecution , you can now specify whether focus remains unchanged ( none ), moves to the input box ( input ), or shifts to the most recently executed cell ( lastExecution ) whenever code is executed. By default, the focus moves to the input box. Workbench Improved extension search results When you search for extensions using free-form text in the Extensions view, installed extensions now appear at the top of the search results. This makes it easier to find and manage your installed extensions when searching through the Marketplace. Download extensions from the Extensions view You can now download extensions directly from VS Code by using the download action in the context menu of an extension in the Extensions view. This can be useful if you want to download an extension without installing it. Extension disk space You can now see the memory usage of an extension on disk in the Extensions editor. This can help you understand how much disk space an extension is using. Find in Explorer improvements In the September release, we introduced the ability to find files in the Explorer across the entire project, a capability that was previously unavailable. However, this update temporarily removed highlight mode and limited certain actions. In this release, we’re bringing back highlight mode. This feature allows you to easily locate files and folders across your workspace, with matching results highlighted for better visibility. Additionally, we’ve introduced a new visual indicator on collapsed folders, showing if matches are hidden within them. The filter toggle remains available, enabling you to focus only on files and folders that match your query by hiding non-matching items. We also reenabled all context menu actions we had to disable in a previous release. We’ve also improved the user experience when using the find control. When scrolled to the top of the file explorer, additional space is created at the top, ensuring the control doesn’t obstruct your search results. Move views between Primary and Secondary Side Bar You could already move a view container to another location by using drag and drop or by using the Move View command. You can now directly use the Move To context menu action on a view container to move it between the Primary Side Bar, Secondary Side Bar, or Panel area. Hide navigation controls in the title area Some people prefer to keep the title area as clean as possible. We added a new setting workbench.navigationControl.enabled that enables you to hide the back/forward buttons in the title area. You can also access this setting by right-clicking in the title area, and selecting Navigation Controls . Editor Configure paste and drop behavior When you drag and drop or copy and paste a file into a text editor, VS Code provides multiple ways to insert it into that file. By default, VS Code tries to insert the file's workspace relative path. Now you can use the drop/paste control to switch how the resource is inserted. Extensions can also provide customized edits, such as in Markdown, which provides edits that insert Markdown links . With the new editor.pasteAs.preferences and editor.dropIntoEditor.preferences settings, you can now specify a preference for which edit type will be used by default. For example, if you'd like copy/paste to always insert the absolute path of pasted files, just set: "editor.pasteAs.preferences" : [ "uri.path.absolute" ] These settings are ordered lists of edit kinds. The first matching edit of a preferred kind is applied by default. You can still use the drop/paste control to change to a different type of edit after the default edit is applied. These new settings play nicely with our new copy and paste with imports support in JavaScript and TypeScript . This feature automatically adds imports when copy and pasting code across JavaScript or TypeScript files. To avoid disrupting your workflows, by default, we decided that paste just inserts plain text and paste with imports is offered as an option in the paste control. However, if you'd like VS Code to always try to paste with imports, just set: "editor.pasteAs.preferences" : [ "text.updateImports" ] Now, VS Code automatically tries to paste with imports when possible, falling back to pasting plain text if no paste with imports edit is available. Right now, this only works for JavaScript and TypeScript, but we hope additional languages will adopt support over time. Finally, you can now also specify a preferred paste style when setting up a editor.action.pasteAs keybinding. The keybinding below will always try pasting and updating imports: { "key" : "ctrl+shift+v" , "command" : "editor.action.pasteAs" , "args" : { "preferences" : [ "text.updateImports" ] } } Persist editor find history The Find control now can persist the search history across sessions and restores it across VS Code restarts. The search history is stored per workspace and can be disabled via the editor.find.history setting. Overtype mode Did you know that VS Code didn't support overwriting text in the editor, unless you installed the Vim keymap? On popular request, we now added overtype mode to overwrite text in the editor instead of inserting it when typing. A useful scenario for this is when editing Markdown tables, where you want to keep the table cell boundaries nicely aligned. This mode can be toggled with the command View: Toggle Overtype/Insert Mode or by using the Insert key on your keyboard. When you're in overtype mode, the Status Bar shows an OVR indicator. It is possible to change the cursor style while in overtype mode by using the setting editor.overtypeCursorStyle . In addition, there is a setting editor.overtypeOnPaste , which determines whether pasting in overtype mode should overwrite or insert. The default behavior is to insert pasted text. Source Control Git blame information (Experimental) This milestone, we have added experimental support for displaying blame information using editor decorations and a Status Bar item. You can enable this functionality by using the git.blame.editorDecoration.enabled and git.blame.statusBarItem.enabled settings. You can hover over the blame information to see more commit details. You can customize the format of the message that is shown in the editor and in the Status Bar with the git.blame.editorDecoration.template and git.blame.statusBarItem.template settings. You can use variables for the most common information. For example, the following template shows the subject of the commit, the author's name, and the author's date relative to now: { "git.blame.editorDecoration.template" : "${subject}, ${authorName} (${authorDateAgo})" } If you would like to adjust the color of the editor decoration, use the git.blame.editorDecorationForeground theme color. Give this experimental feature a try and let us know what you think. Source Control Graph title actions Based on user feedback, we have brought back the Pull, and Push actions to the Source Control Graph view title bar. These actions are enabled if the current history item reference is shown in the Source Control Graph. If you do not want to use these actions, or any other actions from the Source Control Graph view title bar, you can right-click on the title bar and hide them. Notebooks Selection highlight across cells Selection highlighting is now supported within notebooks, allowing for textual selection based highlights across multiple cells. This is controlled with the preexisting setting editor.selectionHighlight . Multi Cursor: Select All Occurrences of Find Match Notebooks now support the keyboard shortcut for Select All Occurrences of Find Match . This can be found with the command id notebook.selectAllFindMatches and can be used by default with the keystroke ⇧⌘L (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+L ) . Run Cells in Section for Markdown Notebooks now have the Run Cells in Section action exposed to the cell toolbar of Markdown cells. If the Markdown cell has a header, all cells contained within the section and children sections are executed. If there is no header, this executes all cells in the surrounding section, if possible. Cell execution time verbosity The execution time information within the cell status bar now has an option for increased verbosity. This can be turned on with the setting notebook.cellExecutionTimeVerbosity and is able to display the execution timestamp in addition to the duration. Terminal Ligature support Ligatures are now supported in the terminal, regardless of whether GPU acceleration is being used. This feature can be turned on with the setting terminal.integrated.fontLigatures : In order to use this feature, make sure you also use a font that supports ligatures terminal.integrated.fontFamily . New variables for customizing terminal tabs What text appears in terminal tabs is determines by the terminal.integrated.tabs.title and terminal.integrated.tabs.description settings which allow the use of a collection of variables. We now support the following new variables: ${shellType} - The detected type of shell that is being used in the terminal. This is similar the default value, but it will not change to git for example when running a git command. ${shellCommand} - The command that is being run in the terminal. This requires shell integration . ${shellPromptInput} - The command that is being run in the terminal or the current detected prompt input. This requires shell integration . Run recent command now shows the history source file The run recent command shell integration feature now includes full size headers for the source of the command, including the history file where relevant and a convenient button to open it. The default keybinding for this command is Ctrl+Alt+R . New supported link format Links with the format /path/to/file.ext, <line> should now be detected as links in the terminal. Testing Attributable coverage This milestone, we finalized an API that enables extensions to provide coverage on a per-test basis, so you can see exactly what code any given test executed. When attributable coverage is available, a filter button is available in the Test Coverage view, in editor actions, in the Test Coverage toolbar when toggled on (via the Test: Test Coverage Toolbar command), or simply by using the Test: Filter Coverage by Test command. Theme: Codesong (preview on vscode.dev ) Reworked inline failure messages We reworked test failure messages to be both more eye-catching and less obtrusive. This is particularly useful for busy scenarios, such as in diffs from SCM or Copilot Edits. Selecting the failure message still opens a peek control to show the complete details of the failure. Improvements to the continuous run UI Previously, the global state of continuous test runs, togglable via the "eye" icon in the Test Explorer view, would toggle on or off continuous running with the default set of run profiles. We reworked the continuous run UI to include a drop-down menu to turn continuous run on or off individually per-profile. Selecting the indicator toggles the last used set of run profiles on or off. Languages TypeScript 5.7 Our JavaScript and TypeScript support now uses TypeScript 5.7. This major update includes a number of language and tooling improvements, along with important bug fixes and performance optimizations. You can read all about the TypeScript 5.7 release on the TypeScript blog . We've also included a few tooling highlights in the following sections. Paste with imports for JavaScript and TypeScript Tired of having to add imports after moving code between files? Try the Paste with imports feature for TypeScript 5.7+. Now whenever you copy and paste code between JavaScript or TypeScript, VS Code can add imports for the pasted code. Notice how not only imports are added, even a new export was added for a local variable that was used in the pasted code! While we think this feature is a huge time saver, we also are sensitive to disrupting your existing workflow. That's why, by default, we've kept it so copy and paste always inserts just the pasted text. If a paste with imports edit is available, you then see the paste control, which lets you select the paste with imports edit. If you prefer always pasting with imports, you can use the new editor.pasteAs.preferences setting : "editor.pasteAs.preferences" : [ "text.updateImports" ] This will always try pasting with imports if an edit is available. You can also setup a keybinding to paste with imports if available: { "key" : "ctrl+shift+v" , "command" : "editor.action.pasteAs" , "args" : { "preferences" : [ "text.updateImports" ] } } If you prefer, you can even do the reverse and make paste with imports the default and add a keybinding to paste as plain text: "editor.pasteAs.preferences" : [ "text.updateImports" ] { "key" : "ctrl+shift+v" , "command" : "editor.action.pasteAs" , "args" : { "preferences" : [ "text.plain" ] } } Finally, if you want to fully disable paste with imports , you can use typescript.updateImportsOnPaste.enabled and javascript.updateImportsOnPaste.enabled . Remote Development The Remote Development extensions , allow you to use a Dev Container , remote machine via SSH or Remote Tunnels , or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. Highlights include: remote-ssh Copilot chat participant Enhanced session logging You can learn more about these features in the Remote Development release notes . Enterprise support Configure allowed extensions You can now control which extensions can be installed in VS Code using the extensions.allowed setting. This setting allows you to specify allowed or blocked extensions by publisher, specific extensions and versions. If an extension or version is blocked, it will be disabled if already installed. You can specify the following types of extension selectors: Allow or block all extensions from a publisher Allow or block specific extensions Allow specific extension versions Allow specific extension versions and platforms Allow only stable versions of an extension Allow only stable extension versions from a publisher The following JSON snippet shows examples of the different setting values: "extensions.allowed" : { // Allow all extensions from the 'microsoft' publisher. If the key does not have a '.', it means it is a publisher ID. "microsoft" : true , // Allow all extensions from the 'github' publisher "github" : true , // Allow prettier extension "esbenp.prettier-vscode" : true , // Do not allow docker extension "ms-azuretools.vscode-docker" : false , // Allow only version 3.0.0 of the eslint extension "dbaeumer.vscode-eslint" : [ "3.0.0" ], // Allow multiple versions of the figma extension "figma.figma-vscode-extension" : [ "3.0.0" , "4.2.3" , "4.1.2" ], // Allow version 5.0.0 of the rust extension on Windows and macOS "rust-lang.rust-analyzer" : [ "5.0.0@win32-x64" , "5.0.0@darwin-x64" ], // Allow only stable versions of the GitHub Pull Requests extension "github.vscode-pull-request-github" : "stable" , // Allow only stable versions from redhat publisher "redhat" : "stable" } Specify publishers by their publisher ID. If a key does not have a period ( . ), it is considered a publisher ID. If a key has a period, it is considered an extension ID. The use of wildcards is currently not supported. You can use microsoft as the publisher ID to refer to all extensions published by Microsoft, even though they might have different publisher IDs. Version ranges are not supported. If you want to allow multiple versions of an extension, you must specify each version individually. To further restrict versions by platform, use the @ symbol to specify the platform. For example, "rust-lang.rust-analyzer": ["5.0.0@win32-x64", "5.0.0@darwin-x64"] . For more details, refer to the enterprise documentation . Administrators can also configure this setting via group policy on Windows. For more information, see the Group Policy on Windows section in the enterprise documentation. Set up VS Code with preinstalled extensions You can set up VS Code with a set of preinstalled extensions ( bootstrap ). This functionality is useful in cases where you prepare a machine image, virtual machine, or cloud workstation where VS Code is preinstalled and specific extensions are immediately available for users. Note : Support for preinstalling extensions is currently only available on Windows. Follow these steps to bootstrap extensions: Create a folder bootstrap\extensions in the VS Code installation directory. Download the VSIX files for the extensions that you want to preinstall and place them in the bootstrap\extensions folder. When a user launches VS Code for the first time, all extensions in the bootstrap\extensions folder are installed silently in the background. Users can still uninstall extensions that were preinstalled. Restarting VS Code after uninstalling an extension will not reinstall the extension. Contributions to extensions Python Python Environments extension In this release we are introducing the Python Environments extension, now available in preview on the Marketplace. This extension simplifies Python environment management, offering a UI to create, delete, and manage environments, along with package management for installing and uninstalling packages. Designed to integrate seamlessly with your preferred environment managers via various APIs, it supports Global Python interpreters, venv, and Conda by default. Developers can build extensions to add support for their favorite Python environment managers and integrate with our extension UI, enhancing functionality and user experience. You can download the Python Environments in the Marketplace, and use it with the pre-release version of the Python extension. Python testing enhancements The --rootdir argument for pytest is now dynamically adjusted based on the presence of a python.testing.cwd setting in your workspace. Restarting a test debugging session now reruns only the specified tests. Coverage support updated to handle NoSource exceptions. pytest-describe plugin is supported with test detection and execution in the UI. Testing Rewrite now leverages FIFO instead of UDS for interprocess communication allowing users to harness pytest plugins like pytest_socket in their own testing design. Rewrite Nearing Default Status: This release addresses the final known issue in the testing rewrite, and unless further issues arrive, the rewrite experiment will be turned off and the rewrite set to default in early 2025. Python REPL enhancements Leave focus on editor after smart-send to Native REPL Improved handling after reload for Native REPL Fix indentation error issues with Python 3.13 in VS Code terminal Pylance "full" language server mode The python.analysis.languageServerMode setting now also supports full mode, enabling you to take advantage of the complete range of Pylance's functionality and the most comprehensive IntelliSense experience. It's worth noting that this comes at the cost of lower performance, as it can cause Pylance to be resource-intensive, particularly in large codebases. The python.analysis.languageServerMode setting now changes the default values of the following settings, depending on whether it's set to light , default or full : Setting light default full python.analysis.exclude ["**"] [] [] python.analysis.useLibraryCodeForTypes false true true python.analysis.enablePytestSupport false true true python.analysis.indexing false true true python.analysis.autoImportCompletions false false true python.analysis.showOnlyDirectDependenciesInAutoImport false false true python.analysis.packageIndexDepths [ { "name": "sklearn", "depth": 2 }, { "name": "matplotlib", "depth": 2 }, { "name": "scipy", "depth": 2 }, { "name": "django", "depth": 2 }, { "name": "flask", "depth": 2 }, { "name": "fastapi", "depth": 2 } ] [ { "name": "sklearn", "depth": 2 }, { "name": "matplotlib", "depth": 2 }, { "name": "scipy", "depth": 2 }, { "name": "django", "depth": 2 }, { "name": "flask", "depth": 2 }, { "name": "fastapi", "depth": 2 } ] { "name": "", "depth": 4, "includeAllSymbols": true } python.analysis.regenerateStdLibIndices false false true python.analysis.userFileIndexingLimit 2000 2000 -1 python.analysis.includeAliasesFromUserFiles false false true python.analysis.functionReturnTypes false false true python.analysis.pytestParameters false false true python.analysis.supportRestructuredText false false true python.analysis.supportDocstringTemplate false false true TypeScript TypeScript expandable hover (Experimental) This milestone, we made it possible to view expanded/contracted information from the TS server. The extension uses the Expandable Hover API to show + and - markers in the editor hover to display more or less information. The experimental setting can be enabled using typescript.experimental.expandableHover . For this setting to work, you must be on TypeScript version 5.8 or above. You can change the TypeScript version by using the TypeScript: Select TypeScript Version... command. Microsoft Account now uses MSAL (with WAM support on Windows) In order to ensure a strong security baseline for Microsoft authentication, we've adopted the Microsoft Authentication Library in the Microsoft Account extension. One of the stand out features of this work is WAM (Web Account Manager... also known as Broker ) integration. Put simply, rather than going to the browser for Microsoft authentication flows, we now talk to the OS directly, which is the recommended way of acquiring a Microsoft authentication session. Additionally, it's faster since we're able to leverage the accounts that you're already logged into on the OS. Let us know if you see any issues with this new flow. If you do see a major issue and need to revert back to the old Microsoft authentication behavior, you can do so with microsoft-authentication.implementation (setting it to classic , and restarting VS Code) but do keep in mind that this setting won't be around for much longer. So, open an issue if you are having trouble with the MSAL flow. Extension Authoring @vscode/chat-extension-utils We've had our chat and language model extension APIs available for several months to let extension authors integrate with GitHub Copilot. But we've found that working with LLMs and building high-quality chat extensions is inherently complex, especially if you want to make use of tool calling. We've published an npm package, @vscode/chat-extension-utils , that aims to make it as easy as possible to get a chat participant up and running. It takes over several things that you would otherwise have to do yourself, so that your chat participant can be implemented in a just a few lines of code. The package also contains a collection of useful, high-quality elements to use with @vscode/prompt-tsx . You can view the full documentation in the chat-extension-utils repository and see it in action in the sample chat extension . Our new LanguageModelTool API docs also describe how to use it. Attributable Coverage API The test coverage APIs now enable extensions to provide coverage information on a per-test basis. To implement this API, populate the the includesTests?: TestItem[] property on the FileCoverage to indicate which tests executed code in that file, and implement TestRunProfile.loadDetailedCoverageForTest to provide statement and declaration coverage. See the Attributable Coverage section above for an example of what this looks like for users. Contributing to a JavaScript Debug Terminal The JavaScript debugger now has a mechanism for other extensions to participate in the creation of JavaScript Debug Terminals. This enables frameworks, or runtimes aside from Node.js, to enable debugging in the same familiar place. Refer to the JavaScript Debugger documentation for more information. Proxy support for Node.js fetch API The global fetch function now comes with proxy support enabled ( http.fetchAdditionalSupport ). This is similar to the https module, which already had proxy support. Preview Features Paste code to attach chat context Previously, you could already attach files as context to Copilot Chat. For more fine-grained control over the context, you can now paste a code fragment to attach it as context for chat. This adds the necessary file information and corresponding line numbers. You can only paste code coming from files in the current workspace. To try this out, copy some code and paste it in Inline Chat, Quick Chat, or the Chat view. Select the paste control that shows up and select Pasted Code Attachment. Alternatively, you can set the editor.pasteAs.preferences setting: "editor.pasteAs.preferences" : [ "chat.attach.text" ] Terminal completions for more shells We added experimental support for terminal completions in pwsh in prior iterations. This release, we have started working on expanding this to other shells. Specifically targeting bash and zsh for now, but since this new approach is powered by an extension host API, we plan on having general support for most shells. You can try out the current work in progress by setting terminal.integrated.suggest.enabled and terminal.integrated.suggest.enableExtensionCompletions . Currently only cd , code , and code-insiders arguments are supported. Proposed APIs Proposed Value Selection API on Quick Pick For InputBox you have been able to set the "value selection", which enables you to programmatically select part or all of the input. This milestone, we added a proposed API for value selection in a QuickPick. Here's an example of what that might look like: const qp = vscode . window . createQuickPick (); qp . value = '12345678' ; qp . valueSelection = [ 4 , 6 ]; qp . items = [ { label: '12345678' , description: 'desc 1' }, { label: '12345678' , description: 'desc 2' }, { label: '12345678' , description: 'desc 3' } ]; qp . show (); Try out the valueSelectionInQuickPick proposal and let us know what you think in this GitHub issue ! Proposed Native Window Handle API This milestone, we added a new proposed API to retrieve the native window handle of the focused window. The native window handle is an OS concept that essentially provides a pointer to a particular window. This is useful if you are interacting with native code and need to, for example, render a native dialog on top of a window. declare module 'vscode' { export namespace window { /** * Retrieves the native window handle of the current active window. * This will be updated when the active window changes. */ export const nativeHandle : Uint8Array | undefined ; } } This was added specifically for Microsoft Authentication's adoption of MSAL , so that we could pass the native handle down to the OS so it could render an auth dialog overtop VS Code. If you have a use case or feedback for the nativeWindowHandle proposal , let us know what you think in this GitHub issue ! Engineering Optimized extension updates with vscode-unpkg service To reduce the load on the Marketplace infrastructure, VS Code now uses the newly added endpoint from the vscode-unpkg service to check for extension updates. The service implements server-side caching with a 10-minute TTL, which significantly reduces the number direct requests to the Marketplace. The optimization is controlled via the extensions.gallery.useUnpkgResourceApi setting (enabled by default). If you notice issues with extension updates, you can disable this functionality with extensions.gallery.useUnpkgResourceApi , and revert back to direct Marketplace version checks. Ground work for GPU acceleration in the editor We are excited to announce that we have started work on enabling GPU acceleration in the editor, similar to the terminal . The goals of this effort are to improve the overall coding experience primarily by reducing input latency and improving scrolling performance. This is still early and not ready to test out, but we wanted to share some details about the progress that has been made: The GPU renderer is using WebGPU behind the scenes. We're focusing currently on feature parity and correctness over performance. There's a fallback mechanism when GPU acceleration is enabled that allows lines to "fallback" to DOM rendering when it's not fully supported. This means that we can self-host early on and currently incompatible lines will show using the DOM approach instead. Some examples of lines that currently fallback: lines over 200 characters, lines with certain Monaco decorations (e.g. fading unused variables), lines that wrap, and so on. Monaco's inline decorations which allow styling the actual elements containing the characters posed a big challenge for this feature as they are styled using CSS. The approach we're using to support most inline decorations without breaking or changing API is to detect the CSS attached to these decorations and then support a subset of common CSS properties, falling back if not all styles are supported. Here's a screenshot of the feature in action. Note the yellow line in the gutter tells us what lines are using fallback rendering. This particular case uses fallback rendering due to the dontShow parameter having an inline decoration as it's unused: The issue tracking this work is #221145 which has frequent updates and more details on progress as it's made. EOL warning for macOS 10.15 VS Code desktop will be updating to Electron 33 in the next couple of milestones. With the Electron 33 update, VS Code desktop will no longer run on macOS Catalina . In this milestone, we have added deprecation notices for the users on this affected platform to prepare them for migration. If you are a user of the aforementioned OS version, please take a look at our FAQ for additional information. Notable fixes 233915 Share an extension with others by using the Copy Link action in the context menu of an extension in the Extensions view. 231542 Frequently unable to save file or file data gets erased with error EBUSY 233304 onDidChangeCheckboxState broken in 1.95 232263 Optimize tree view such that cross process calls are batched 156723 Drag and drop support fixed when running with wayland Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @RedCMD (RedCMD) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @sahin52 (Sahin Kasap) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @a-stewart (Anthony Stewart) : Add support for a border between sidebar and panel titles and views PR #157318 @aravind-n (Aravind Nidadavolu) : Fix fish shell integration execution order PR #226589 @BABA983 (BABA) : Correct ShellIntegrationDecorationsEnabled in markdownDescription PR #233387 @BenLocal (benshi) : Cli serve_web sets the path prefix to / - /, commit value parsing error PR #233986 @BlackHole1 (Kevin Cui) : fix: cannot open vscode when use vscode-win32-x64 in Windows PR #233285 @BugGambit (Fredrik Anfinsen) : Add support for links 'foo, ' PR #231775 @cachandlerdev : Copy extension link PR #234210 @CrafterKolyan (Nikolai Korolev) : Add interface for adding value selection in QuickPick for extension API PR #233275 @davidmartos96 (David Martos) : Fix PATH prepending when using Fish PR #232291 @dibarbet (David Barbet) : Do not mark interpolation tokens as strings in C# PR #232772 @duncpro (Duncan) : fix: clickability of create new file/folder button PR #232130 @elias-pap (Elias Papavasileiou) : feat: add icon for Vite PR #234620 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) Add workbench.view.showQuietly settings object to stop extensions revealing hidden Output view (fix #105270) PR #205225 Fix Go to Current History Item breakage (fix #235063) PR #235067 Enable Go to Current History Item correctly after reference picker change (fix #235132) PR #235134 @iisaduan (Isabel Duan) : fix typescript organizeImports settings PR #232676 @jeanp413 (Jean Pierre) : Fixes old extensionHost process is not killed immediately after reloading vscode web tab in the browser PR #234944 @Kannav02 (Kannav Sethi) : Change "Organize Imports" command label to "Optimize Imports" PR #232869 @LionelJouin (Lionel Jouin) : Fix: go grammar update (#_232142) PR #232335 @LitoMore (LitoMore) : Remove Microsoft-related logos PR #215758 @Logicer16 (Logicer) : Fix grammar in activeOnStart description PR #197536 @RedCMD (RedCMD) : Add .winget file extension to YAML PR #232218 @ribru17 (Riley Bruins) : Render JSDoc examples as typescript code PR #234143 @sandersn (Nathan Shively-Sanders) : Revert register copilotRelated with copilot PR #233729 @nickdiego (Nick Yamane) : Fix for drag and drop support when using wayland Chromium CL Contributions to vscode-emmet-helper : @onlurking (Diogo Felix) : Add missing HTML tags to emmet PR #90 Contributions to vscode-eslint : @MariaSolOs (Maria José Solano) : Update contributing instructions PR #1947 Contributions to vscode-extension-samples : @olguzzar (Olivia Guzzardo) : Update Chat tutorial to use request.model PR #1125 @phil294 (Philip Waritschlager) : webview-codicons: Move codicons dependency from devDependencies into dependencies PR #1005 @witsaint (gaodingqiang) : fix: lsp-embedded-language-service cleaninterval args type PR #1126 Contributions to vscode-extension-telemetry : @kmagiera (Krzysztof Magiera) : Propagate session ID metadata PR #215 Contributions to vscode-hexeditor : @Antecer (Antecer) : We need a WYSIWYG copy method PR #540 @Hexa3333 (Alp Yılmaz) : Fix: DisplayContextSelection read violation (#_547) PR #548 @jogo- : Update CHANGELOG.md PR #549 @tomilho (Tomás Silva) : fix: ctrl+f not working with caps lock active PR #555 Contributions to vscode-json-languageservice : @jeremyfiel (Jeremy Fiel) : fix: typo in then description PR #251 @Legend-Master (Tony) : Fix slow large oneof validation PR #247 @sumimakito (Makito) : feat(completion): support detail from schema PR #243 Contributions to vscode-jupyter : @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) : Add connor4312.esbuild-problem-matchers recommendation PR #16195 @pwang347 (Paul) : Add public API event for kernel post-initialization PR #16214 Contributions to vscode-mypy : @hamirmahal (Hamir Mahal) : fix: address dev-dependency issues reported by npm audit PR #327 @taesungh (Taesung Hwang) : Use global settings for ignorePatterns default PR #325 Contributions to vscode-python-debugger : @rchiodo (Rich Chiodo) Update debugpy_info for v1.8.8 PR #500 Update debugpy version to 1.8.9 PR #505 Contributions to vscode-python-tools-extension-template : @oliversen (Oliver Olsen) Exclude .dist-info directories from extension package PR #215 Fix glob pattern for .pyc files in .vscodeignore PR #216 Remove duplicate code from noxfile.py PR #217 Contributions to vscode-test-web : @Cecil0o0 (hj) : VS Code main has moved back to npm, we could catch it PR #148 Contributions to inno-updater : @BlackHole1 (Kevin Cui) : fix: dialog is show when silent is true PR #29 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @EwanDubashinski (Ivan Dubashinskii) : Added link to the PL/SQL language server PR #2057 @gquerret (Gilles Querret) : Add OpenEdge ABL in language servers list PR #2056 @orbitalquark : Added link to client implementation for Textadept. PR #2058 On this page there are 19 sections On this page GitHub Copilot Accessibility Workbench Editor Source Control Notebooks Terminal Testing Languages Remote Development Enterprise support Set up VS Code with preinstalled extensions Contributions to extensions Extension Authoring Preview Features Proposed APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close # technology Follow Hide General discussions about technology and its impact on society. Create Post Older #technology posts 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu Everyone Is Talking About an AI Bubble. Salesforce Just Added 6,000 Enterprise Customers. Pratik Pratik Pratik Follow Dec 24 '25 Everyone Is Talking About an AI Bubble. Salesforce Just Added 6,000 Enterprise Customers. # ai # salesforce # technology # agents Comments Add Comment 4 min read How AI Agents Integrate with Enterprise Systems and APIs to Perform Actions Alex Alex Alex Follow Dec 24 '25 How AI Agents Integrate with Enterprise Systems and APIs to Perform Actions # ai # agents # technology Comments Add Comment 3 min read Database Systems: Latest Trends & Innovations Hemanath Kumar J Hemanath Kumar J Hemanath Kumar J Follow Dec 24 '25 Database Systems: Latest Trends & Innovations # news # database # technology # innovation Comments Add Comment 2 min read Your December 2025 AI Coffee Break: 5 Major Developments You Need to Know Ethan Zhang Ethan Zhang Ethan Zhang Follow Dec 22 '25 Your December 2025 AI Coffee Break: 5 Major Developments You Need to Know # news # ai # machinelearning # technology Comments Add Comment 5 min read The AI Hype Party is Over: 2026 is the Year AI Gets Real Akhilesh Akhilesh Akhilesh Follow Jan 3 The AI Hype Party is Over: 2026 is the Year AI Gets Real # smallmodels # softwareengineering # technology # aiml 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 7 min read The Adult Industry's Security Problem Isn't About Shame,It's About Systematic Exclusion ZB25 ZB25 ZB25 Follow Dec 21 '25 The Adult Industry's Security Problem Isn't About Shame,It's About Systematic Exclusion # cybersecurity # technology Comments Add Comment 6 min read From Weeks to 15 Minutes: How We Built a Data Migration System That Changed Everything - 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Dec 8, 2025 CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise Follow Dec 8 '25 Outil de Cybersécurité du Jour - Dec 8, 2025 # cybersecurity # security # tools # technology Comments Add Comment 3 min read Outil de Cybersécurité du Jour - Dec 7, 2025 CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise Follow Dec 7 '25 Outil de Cybersécurité du Jour - Dec 7, 2025 # cybersecurity # security # tools # technology Comments Add Comment 3 min read Electrifying AI with Code: A Spark of Innovation Malik Abualzait Malik Abualzait Malik Abualzait Follow Dec 7 '25 Electrifying AI with Code: A Spark of Innovation # ai # technology # future Comments Add Comment 3 min read AI This Week: Competition Heats Up While Adoption Struggles - Your Morning Coffee Briefing Ethan Zhang Ethan Zhang Ethan Zhang Follow Dec 6 '25 AI This Week: Competition Heats Up While Adoption Struggles - Your Morning Coffee Briefing # news # ai # technology # automation Comments Add Comment 5 min read Tech's Environmental Impact: Can Code Save Nature? Malik Abualzait Malik Abualzait Malik Abualzait Follow Dec 7 '25 Tech's Environmental Impact: Can Code Save Nature? # nature # positive # role # technology Comments Add Comment 2 min read Outil de Cybersécurité du Jour - Dec 6, 2025 CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise Follow Dec 6 '25 Outil de Cybersécurité du Jour - Dec 6, 2025 # cybersecurity # security # tools # technology Comments Add Comment 3 min read Busting the AI Hype: What's Real, What's a Bubble? Malik Abualzait Malik Abualzait Malik Abualzait Follow Dec 7 '25 Busting the AI Hype: What's Real, What's a Bubble? # opinion # dont # fear # technology Comments Add Comment 2 min read Is Web 3.5 the Future of the Internet? Key Differences Nima Moosarezaie Nima Moosarezaie Nima Moosarezaie Follow Dec 6 '25 Is Web 3.5 the Future of the Internet? 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Beginners Follow Hide "A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step." -Chinese Proverb Create Post submission guidelines UPDATED AUGUST 2, 2019 This tag is dedicated to beginners to programming, development, networking, or to a particular language. Everything should be geared towards that! For Questions... Consider using this tag along with #help, if... You are new to a language, or to programming in general, You want an explanation with NO prerequisite knowledge required. You want insight from more experienced developers. Please do not use this tag if you are merely new to a tool, library, or framework. See also, #explainlikeimfive For Articles... Posts should be specifically geared towards true beginners (experience level 0-2 out of 10). Posts should require NO prerequisite knowledge, except perhaps general (language-agnostic) essentials of programming. Posts should NOT merely be for beginners to a tool, library, or framework. If your article does not meet these qualifications, please select a different tag. Promotional Rules Posts should NOT primarily promote an external work. This is what Listings is for. Otherwise accepable posts MAY include a brief (1-2 sentence) plug for another resource at the bottom. Resource lists ARE acceptable if they follow these rules: Include at least 3 distinct authors/creators. Clearly indicate which resources are FREE, which require PII, and which cost money. Do not use personal affiliate links to monetize. Indicate at the top that the article contains promotional links. about #beginners If you're writing for this tag, we recommend you read this article . If you're asking a question, read this article . Older #beginners posts 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu Advanced Spreadsheet Implementation with RevoGrid in React Michael Turner Michael Turner Michael Turner Follow Jan 12 Advanced Spreadsheet Implementation with RevoGrid in React # react # webdev # beginners # tutorial Comments Add Comment 6 min read Building Feature-Rich Data Tables with jQWidgets React Grid Michael Turner Michael Turner Michael Turner Follow Jan 12 Building Feature-Rich Data Tables with jQWidgets React Grid # react # webdev # javascript # beginners Comments Add Comment 6 min read Advanced Data Management with GigaTables React: Building Enterprise-Grade Tables Michael Turner Michael Turner Michael Turner Follow Jan 12 Advanced Data Management with GigaTables React: Building Enterprise-Grade Tables # webdev # programming # beginners # tutorial Comments Add Comment 6 min read Guide to get started with Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) Neweraofcoding Neweraofcoding Neweraofcoding Follow Jan 12 Guide to get started with Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) # beginners # llm # rag # tutorial Comments Add Comment 2 min read Building Advanced Data Tables with AG Grid in React Michael Turner Michael Turner Michael Turner Follow Jan 12 Building Advanced Data Tables with AG Grid in React # react # tutorial # beginners # programming Comments Add Comment 6 min read Admin-Only Dashboard Rule of Thumb Sospeter Mong'are Sospeter Mong'are Sospeter Mong'are Follow Jan 12 Admin-Only Dashboard Rule of Thumb # programming # beginners # datascience # database 1 reaction Comments 2 comments 3 min read Why Your Python Code Takes Hours Instead of Seconds (A 3-Line Fix) Samuel Ochaba Samuel Ochaba Samuel Ochaba Follow Jan 12 Why Your Python Code Takes Hours Instead of Seconds (A 3-Line Fix) # python # performance # beginners # programming Comments Add Comment 2 min read From Rusty to Release: How an Infinite Loop Taught Me to Respect React DevTools Beleke Ian Beleke Ian Beleke Ian Follow Jan 12 From Rusty to Release: How an Infinite Loop Taught Me to Respect React DevTools # react # webdev # beginners # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read How I Would Learn Web3 From Scratch Today (Without Wasting a Year) Emir Taner Emir Taner Emir Taner Follow Jan 12 How I Would Learn Web3 From Scratch Today (Without Wasting a Year) # web3 # beginners # devops # machinelearning 2 reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Introduction to DevOps #5. DevOps Tooling Landscape Himanshu Bhatt Himanshu Bhatt Himanshu Bhatt Follow Jan 12 Introduction to DevOps #5. DevOps Tooling Landscape # discuss # devops # cloud # beginners 6 reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Scrapy Log Files: Save, Rotate, and Organize Your Crawler Logs Muhammad Ikramullah Khan Muhammad Ikramullah Khan Muhammad Ikramullah Khan Follow Jan 12 Scrapy Log Files: Save, Rotate, and Organize Your Crawler Logs # webdev # programming # beginners # python Comments Add Comment 9 min read Understanding Okta Tokens Manikanta Yarramsetti Manikanta Yarramsetti Manikanta Yarramsetti Follow Jan 12 Understanding Okta Tokens # api # beginners # security Comments Add Comment 2 min read My first real project : Lemon chat Joseph Pascal Yao Joseph Pascal Yao Joseph Pascal Yao Follow Jan 12 My first real project : Lemon chat # programming # beginners # csharp # opensource Comments Add Comment 1 min read I Thought I Understood Python Functions — Until One Line Returned None Emmimal Alexander Emmimal Alexander Emmimal Alexander Follow Jan 12 I Thought I Understood Python Functions — Until One Line Returned None # python # programming # learning # beginners Comments Add Comment 3 min read Inside Git: How It Works and the Role of the `.git` Folder Umar Hayat Umar Hayat Umar Hayat Follow Jan 12 Inside Git: How It Works and the Role of the `.git` Folder # git # beginners # tutorial # learning 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read Stop Building Ugly Apps: Create a Modern Python Dashboard in 15 Minutes 📊 Larry Larry Larry Follow Jan 12 Stop Building Ugly Apps: Create a Modern Python Dashboard in 15 Minutes 📊 # python # datavisualization # beginners # ui Comments Add Comment 3 min read Why Version Control Exists: The Pen Drive Problem Anoop Rajoriya Anoop Rajoriya Anoop Rajoriya Follow Jan 12 Why Version Control Exists: The Pen Drive Problem # git # beginners # webdev # programming Comments Add Comment 3 min read Load Balancing Explained (Simple Guide for Beginners) Mourya Vamsi Modugula Mourya Vamsi Modugula Mourya Vamsi Modugula Follow Jan 12 Load Balancing Explained (Simple Guide for Beginners) # webdev # programming # systemdesign # beginners Comments Add Comment 3 min read Java Variables Kesavarthini Kesavarthini Kesavarthini Follow Jan 12 Java Variables # java # beginners # learning # programming Comments Add Comment 1 min read Python Selenium and Its Architecture, Significance of the python virtual environment NandithaShri S.k NandithaShri S.k NandithaShri S.k Follow Jan 12 Python Selenium and Its Architecture, Significance of the python virtual environment # webdev # beginners # python # career Comments Add Comment 3 min read Introduction to DevOps #2. Life Before DevOps Himanshu Bhatt Himanshu Bhatt Himanshu Bhatt Follow Jan 12 Introduction to DevOps #2. Life Before DevOps # discuss # devops # cloud # beginners 6 reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Getting Started with MUI X Data Grid in React: Building Your First Data Table Michael Turner Michael Turner Michael Turner Follow Jan 12 Getting Started with MUI X Data Grid in React: Building Your First Data Table # webdev # programming # javascript # beginners Comments Add Comment 6 min read Cloud Computing for Beginners: A Simple Guide for Students & New Developers ☁️ Sahinur Sahinur Sahinur Follow Jan 12 Cloud Computing for Beginners: A Simple Guide for Students & New Developers ☁️ # cloud # azure # beginners # developer Comments Add Comment 2 min read Electric Industry Operation GeunWooJeon GeunWooJeon GeunWooJeon Follow Jan 12 Electric Industry Operation # beginners # devjournal # learning Comments Add Comment 4 min read Starting My Learning Journey in Tech Hassan Olamide Hassan Olamide Hassan Olamide Follow Jan 12 Starting My Learning Journey in Tech # beginners # devjournal # learning # webdev 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Beginners Follow Hide "A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step." -Chinese Proverb Create Post submission guidelines UPDATED AUGUST 2, 2019 This tag is dedicated to beginners to programming, development, networking, or to a particular language. Everything should be geared towards that! For Questions... Consider using this tag along with #help, if... You are new to a language, or to programming in general, You want an explanation with NO prerequisite knowledge required. You want insight from more experienced developers. Please do not use this tag if you are merely new to a tool, library, or framework. See also, #explainlikeimfive For Articles... Posts should be specifically geared towards true beginners (experience level 0-2 out of 10). Posts should require NO prerequisite knowledge, except perhaps general (language-agnostic) essentials of programming. Posts should NOT merely be for beginners to a tool, library, or framework. If your article does not meet these qualifications, please select a different tag. Promotional Rules Posts should NOT primarily promote an external work. This is what Listings is for. Otherwise accepable posts MAY include a brief (1-2 sentence) plug for another resource at the bottom. Resource lists ARE acceptable if they follow these rules: Include at least 3 distinct authors/creators. Clearly indicate which resources are FREE, which require PII, and which cost money. Do not use personal affiliate links to monetize. Indicate at the top that the article contains promotional links. about #beginners If you're writing for this tag, we recommend you read this article . If you're asking a question, read this article . Older #beginners posts 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu The Rise of Low-Code and No-Code Development Ravish Kumar Ravish Kumar Ravish Kumar Follow Jan 11 The Rise of Low-Code and No-Code Development # beginners # productivity # softwaredevelopment # tooling Comments Add Comment 3 min read Linux File & Directory Operations for DevOps — v1.0 Chetan Tekam Chetan Tekam Chetan Tekam Follow Jan 11 Linux File & Directory Operations for DevOps — v1.0 # beginners # linux # cloud # devops Comments Add Comment 2 min read HTML-101 #5. Text Formatting, Quotes & Code Formatting Himanshu Bhatt Himanshu Bhatt Himanshu Bhatt Follow Jan 11 HTML-101 #5. Text Formatting, Quotes & Code Formatting # html # learninpublic # beginners # tutorial 5 reactions Comments Add Comment 5 min read [Gaming][NS] Dark Souls Remastered: A Noob's Guide to Beating the Game Evan Lin Evan Lin Evan Lin Follow Jan 11 [Gaming][NS] Dark Souls Remastered: A Noob's Guide to Beating the Game # beginners # learning # tutorial Comments Add Comment 5 min read When Should You Use AWS Lambda? A Beginner's Perspective Sahinur Sahinur Sahinur Follow Jan 11 When Should You Use AWS Lambda? A Beginner's Perspective # aws # serverless # beginners # lambda Comments Add Comment 5 min read My Journey into AWS & DevOps: Getting Started with Hands-On Learning irfan pasha irfan pasha irfan pasha Follow Jan 11 My Journey into AWS & DevOps: Getting Started with Hands-On Learning # aws # devops # beginners # learning Comments Add Comment 1 min read Launching EC2 instances within a VPC (along with Wizard) Jeya Shri Jeya Shri Jeya Shri Follow Jan 10 Launching EC2 instances within a VPC (along with Wizard) # beginners # cloud # aws # vpc Comments Add Comment 3 min read #1-2) 조건문은 결국 사전 처방이다. JEON HYUNJUN JEON HYUNJUN JEON HYUNJUN Follow Jan 11 #1-2) 조건문은 결국 사전 처방이다. # beginners # python # tutorial Comments Add Comment 2 min read Vim Mode: Edit Prompts at the Speed of Thought Rajesh Royal Rajesh Royal Rajesh Royal Follow Jan 10 Vim Mode: Edit Prompts at the Speed of Thought # tutorial # claudecode # productivity # beginners Comments Add Comment 4 min read Accelerate Fluid Simulator Aditya Singh Aditya Singh Aditya Singh Follow Jan 10 Accelerate Fluid Simulator # simulation # programming # beginners # learning Comments Add Comment 3 min read Level 1 - Foundations #1. Client-Server Model Himanshu Bhatt Himanshu Bhatt Himanshu Bhatt Follow Jan 11 Level 1 - Foundations #1. Client-Server Model # systemdesign # distributedsystems # tutorial # beginners 5 reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read System Design in Real Life: Why Ancient Museums are actually Microservices? Tyrell Wellicq Tyrell Wellicq Tyrell Wellicq Follow Jan 10 System Design in Real Life: Why Ancient Museums are actually Microservices? # discuss # systemdesign # architecture # beginners 1 reaction Comments 1 comment 2 min read Angular Pipes Explained — From Basics to Custom Pipes (With Real Examples) ROHIT SINGH ROHIT SINGH ROHIT SINGH Follow Jan 11 Angular Pipes Explained — From Basics to Custom Pipes (With Real Examples) # beginners # tutorial # typescript # angular Comments Add Comment 2 min read Bug Bounty Hunting in 2026 krlz krlz krlz Follow Jan 11 Bug Bounty Hunting in 2026 # security # bugbounty # tutorial # beginners Comments Add Comment 4 min read Hello dev.to 👋 I’m Ekansh — Building in Public with Web & AI Ekansh | Web & AI Developer Ekansh | Web & AI Developer Ekansh | Web & AI Developer Follow Jan 11 Hello dev.to 👋 I’m Ekansh — Building in Public with Web & AI # discuss # ai # beginners # webdev Comments Add Comment 1 min read Adding a Missing Warning Note Favoured Anuanatata Favoured Anuanatata Favoured Anuanatata Follow Jan 10 Adding a Missing Warning Note # help # beginners # opensource Comments Add Comment 1 min read Python Dictionary Views Are Live (And It Might Break Your Code) Samuel Ochaba Samuel Ochaba Samuel Ochaba Follow Jan 10 Python Dictionary Views Are Live (And It Might Break Your Code) # python # programming # webdev # beginners Comments Add Comment 2 min read Checklist for Promoting Your App: A Step-by-Step Guide That Works Isa Akharume Isa Akharume Isa Akharume Follow Jan 10 Checklist for Promoting Your App: A Step-by-Step Guide That Works # promotingyourapp # webdev # programming # beginners Comments Add Comment 2 min read What Clients ACTUALLY Want From Frontend Devs (Not Clean Code) Laurina Ayarah Laurina Ayarah Laurina Ayarah Follow Jan 10 What Clients ACTUALLY Want From Frontend Devs (Not Clean Code) # webdev # career # beginners # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 9 min read Handling Pagination in Scrapy: Scrape Every Page Without Breaking Muhammad Ikramullah Khan Muhammad Ikramullah Khan Muhammad Ikramullah Khan Follow Jan 10 Handling Pagination in Scrapy: Scrape Every Page Without Breaking # webdev # programming # python # beginners 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 8 min read AWS Cheat Sheet Varalakshmi Varalakshmi Varalakshmi Follow Jan 10 AWS Cheat Sheet # aws # beginners # cloud Comments Add Comment 1 min read # Inside Git: How It Works and the Role of the `.git` Folder saiyam gupta saiyam gupta saiyam gupta Follow Jan 10 # Inside Git: How It Works and the Role of the `.git` Folder # architecture # beginners # git 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 3 min read Metrics + Logs = Zero Panic in Production 🚨 Taverne Tech Taverne Tech Taverne Tech Follow Jan 10 Metrics + Logs = Zero Panic in Production 🚨 # beginners # programming # devops # go Comments Add Comment 4 min read Building Custom Composite Components with STDF in Svelte Lucas Bennett Lucas Bennett Lucas Bennett Follow Jan 10 Building Custom Composite Components with STDF in Svelte # webdev # programming # javascript # beginners Comments Add Comment 7 min read Interactive Program Developement - Semester Project Aleena Mubashar Aleena Mubashar Aleena Mubashar Follow Jan 10 Interactive Program Developement - Semester Project # discuss # programming # beginners # computerscience Comments 1 comment 4 min read loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Beginners Follow Hide "A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step." -Chinese Proverb Create Post submission guidelines UPDATED AUGUST 2, 2019 This tag is dedicated to beginners to programming, development, networking, or to a particular language. Everything should be geared towards that! For Questions... Consider using this tag along with #help, if... You are new to a language, or to programming in general, You want an explanation with NO prerequisite knowledge required. You want insight from more experienced developers. Please do not use this tag if you are merely new to a tool, library, or framework. See also, #explainlikeimfive For Articles... Posts should be specifically geared towards true beginners (experience level 0-2 out of 10). 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Right menu Advanced Spreadsheet Implementation with RevoGrid in React Michael Turner Michael Turner Michael Turner Follow Jan 12 Advanced Spreadsheet Implementation with RevoGrid in React # react # webdev # beginners # tutorial Comments Add Comment 6 min read Building Feature-Rich Data Tables with jQWidgets React Grid Michael Turner Michael Turner Michael Turner Follow Jan 12 Building Feature-Rich Data Tables with jQWidgets React Grid # react # webdev # javascript # beginners Comments Add Comment 6 min read Advanced Data Management with GigaTables React: Building Enterprise-Grade Tables Michael Turner Michael Turner Michael Turner Follow Jan 12 Advanced Data Management with GigaTables React: Building Enterprise-Grade Tables # webdev # programming # beginners # tutorial Comments Add Comment 6 min read Guide to get started with Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) Neweraofcoding Neweraofcoding Neweraofcoding Follow Jan 12 Guide to get started with Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) # beginners # llm # rag # tutorial Comments Add Comment 2 min read Building Advanced Data Tables with AG Grid in React Michael Turner Michael Turner Michael Turner Follow Jan 12 Building Advanced Data Tables with AG Grid in React # react # tutorial # beginners # programming Comments Add Comment 6 min read Admin-Only Dashboard Rule of Thumb Sospeter Mong'are Sospeter Mong'are Sospeter Mong'are Follow Jan 12 Admin-Only Dashboard Rule of Thumb # programming # beginners # datascience # database 1 reaction Comments 2 comments 3 min read Why Your Python Code Takes Hours Instead of Seconds (A 3-Line Fix) Samuel Ochaba Samuel Ochaba Samuel Ochaba Follow Jan 12 Why Your Python Code Takes Hours Instead of Seconds (A 3-Line Fix) # python # performance # beginners # programming Comments Add Comment 2 min read From Rusty to Release: How an Infinite Loop Taught Me to Respect React DevTools Beleke Ian Beleke Ian Beleke Ian Follow Jan 12 From Rusty to Release: How an Infinite Loop Taught Me to Respect React DevTools # react # webdev # beginners # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read How I Would Learn Web3 From Scratch Today (Without Wasting a Year) Emir Taner Emir Taner Emir Taner Follow Jan 12 How I Would Learn Web3 From Scratch Today (Without Wasting a Year) # web3 # beginners # devops # machinelearning 2 reactions Comments Add Comment 2 min read Introduction to DevOps #5. DevOps Tooling Landscape Himanshu Bhatt Himanshu Bhatt Himanshu Bhatt Follow Jan 12 Introduction to DevOps #5. DevOps Tooling Landscape # discuss # devops # cloud # beginners 6 reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Scrapy Log Files: Save, Rotate, and Organize Your Crawler Logs Muhammad Ikramullah Khan Muhammad Ikramullah Khan Muhammad Ikramullah Khan Follow Jan 12 Scrapy Log Files: Save, Rotate, and Organize Your Crawler Logs # webdev # programming # beginners # python Comments Add Comment 9 min read Understanding Okta Tokens Manikanta Yarramsetti Manikanta Yarramsetti Manikanta Yarramsetti Follow Jan 12 Understanding Okta Tokens # api # beginners # security Comments Add Comment 2 min read My first real project : Lemon chat Joseph Pascal Yao Joseph Pascal Yao Joseph Pascal Yao Follow Jan 12 My first real project : Lemon chat # programming # beginners # csharp # opensource Comments Add Comment 1 min read I Thought I Understood Python Functions — Until One Line Returned None Emmimal Alexander Emmimal Alexander Emmimal Alexander Follow Jan 12 I Thought I Understood Python Functions — Until One Line Returned None # python # programming # learning # beginners Comments Add Comment 3 min read Inside Git: How It Works and the Role of the `.git` Folder Umar Hayat Umar Hayat Umar Hayat Follow Jan 12 Inside Git: How It Works and the Role of the `.git` Folder # git # beginners # tutorial # learning 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read Stop Building Ugly Apps: Create a Modern Python Dashboard in 15 Minutes 📊 Larry Larry Larry Follow Jan 12 Stop Building Ugly Apps: Create a Modern Python Dashboard in 15 Minutes 📊 # python # datavisualization # beginners # ui Comments Add Comment 3 min read Why Version Control Exists: The Pen Drive Problem Anoop Rajoriya Anoop Rajoriya Anoop Rajoriya Follow Jan 12 Why Version Control Exists: The Pen Drive Problem # git # beginners # webdev # programming Comments Add Comment 3 min read Load Balancing Explained (Simple Guide for Beginners) Mourya Vamsi Modugula Mourya Vamsi Modugula Mourya Vamsi Modugula Follow Jan 12 Load Balancing Explained (Simple Guide for Beginners) # webdev # programming # systemdesign # beginners Comments Add Comment 3 min read Java Variables Kesavarthini Kesavarthini Kesavarthini Follow Jan 12 Java Variables # java # beginners # learning # programming Comments Add Comment 1 min read Python Selenium and Its Architecture, Significance of the python virtual environment NandithaShri S.k NandithaShri S.k NandithaShri S.k Follow Jan 12 Python Selenium and Its Architecture, Significance of the python virtual environment # webdev # beginners # python # career Comments Add Comment 3 min read Introduction to DevOps #2. Life Before DevOps Himanshu Bhatt Himanshu Bhatt Himanshu Bhatt Follow Jan 12 Introduction to DevOps #2. Life Before DevOps # discuss # devops # cloud # beginners 6 reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Getting Started with MUI X Data Grid in React: Building Your First Data Table Michael Turner Michael Turner Michael Turner Follow Jan 12 Getting Started with MUI X Data Grid in React: Building Your First Data Table # webdev # programming # javascript # beginners Comments Add Comment 6 min read Cloud Computing for Beginners: A Simple Guide for Students & New Developers ☁️ Sahinur Sahinur Sahinur Follow Jan 12 Cloud Computing for Beginners: A Simple Guide for Students & New Developers ☁️ # cloud # azure # beginners # developer Comments Add Comment 2 min read Electric Industry Operation GeunWooJeon GeunWooJeon GeunWooJeon Follow Jan 12 Electric Industry Operation # beginners # devjournal # learning Comments Add Comment 4 min read Starting My Learning Journey in Tech Hassan Olamide Hassan Olamide Hassan Olamide Follow Jan 12 Starting My Learning Journey in Tech # beginners # devjournal # learning # webdev 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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https://dev.to/stackforgetx/advanced-spreadsheet-implementation-with-revogrid-in-react-hcc#comments | Advanced Spreadsheet Implementation with RevoGrid in React - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Add reaction Like Unicorn Exploding Head Raised Hands Fire Jump to Comments Save Boost More... Copy link Copy link Copied to Clipboard Share to X Share to LinkedIn Share to Facebook Share to Mastodon Share Post via... Report Abuse Michael Turner Posted on Jan 12 Advanced Spreadsheet Implementation with RevoGrid in React # webdev # react # tutorial # beginners RevoGrid is a high-performance, virtualized spreadsheet component for React that can handle millions of rows and columns with smooth scrolling and editing capabilities. Built with Web Components and optimized for performance, it's ideal for enterprise applications requiring Excel-like functionality. This guide walks through implementing advanced spreadsheet features using RevoGrid with React, covering virtual scrolling, custom cell editors, and complex data manipulation. This is part 6 of a series on using RevoGrid with React. Prerequisites Before you begin, ensure you have: Node.js version 16.0 or higher npm , yarn , or pnpm package manager A React project (version 16.8 or higher) with hooks support Advanced understanding of React hooks, refs, and performance optimization Familiarity with Web Components and virtualization concepts Knowledge of TypeScript (highly recommended) Installation Install RevoGrid React wrapper: npm install @revolist/revogrid-react Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Or with yarn: yarn add @revolist/revogrid-react Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Or with pnpm: pnpm add @revolist/revogrid-react Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Your package.json should include: { "dependencies" : { "@revolist/revogrid-react" : "^6.0.0" , "react" : "^18.0.0" , "react-dom" : "^18.0.0" } } Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Project Setup RevoGrid requires minimal setup. Import the component and styles in your application: // src/index.js import React from ' react ' ; import ReactDOM from ' react-dom/client ' ; import ' @revolist/revogrid/dist/revogrid.css ' ; import App from ' ./App ' ; const root = ReactDOM . createRoot ( document . getElementById ( ' root ' )); root . render ( < React . StrictMode > < App /> </ React . StrictMode > ); Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode First Example / Basic Usage Let's create a basic RevoGrid component. Create src/Spreadsheet.jsx : // src/Spreadsheet.jsx import React , { useRef , useEffect } from ' react ' ; import { RevoGrid } from ' @revolist/revogrid-react ' ; import ' @revolist/revogrid/dist/revogrid.css ' ; function Spreadsheet () { const gridRef = useRef ( null ); // Column definitions const columns = [ { prop : ' id ' , name : ' ID ' , size : 100 }, { prop : ' name ' , name : ' Name ' , size : 200 }, { prop : ' email ' , name : ' Email ' , size : 250 }, { prop : ' role ' , name : ' Role ' , size : 150 } ]; // Row data const rows = [ { id : 1 , name : ' John Doe ' , email : ' john@example.com ' , role : ' Admin ' }, { id : 2 , name : ' Jane Smith ' , email : ' jane@example.com ' , role : ' User ' }, { id : 3 , name : ' Bob Johnson ' , email : ' bob@example.com ' , role : ' User ' }, { id : 4 , name : ' Alice Williams ' , email : ' alice@example.com ' , role : ' Admin ' } ]; useEffect (() => { if ( gridRef . current ) { const grid = gridRef . current ; // Set data after component mounts grid . columns = columns ; grid . source = rows ; } }, []); return ( < div style = { { height : ' 500px ' , width : ' 100% ' } } > < RevoGrid ref = { gridRef } /> </ div > ); } export default Spreadsheet ; Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Understanding the Basics RevoGrid uses a column-based configuration where: prop : Maps to a property in your row data name : Column header text size : Column width in pixels editor : Custom cell editor component cellTemplate : Custom cell renderer Key concepts for advanced usage: Virtualization : Automatically handles large datasets through virtual scrolling Web Components : Built on Web Components standard for performance Refs : Use refs to access grid API and methods Event Handlers : Respond to cell edits, selections, and other interactions Here's an example with editable cells: // src/EditableSpreadsheet.jsx import React , { useRef , useEffect , useState } from ' react ' ; import { RevoGrid } from ' @revolist/revogrid-react ' ; import ' @revolist/revogrid/dist/revogrid.css ' ; function EditableSpreadsheet () { const gridRef = useRef ( null ); const [ data , setData ] = useState ([ { id : 1 , product : ' Laptop ' , price : 999.99 , stock : 15 }, { id : 2 , product : ' Mouse ' , price : 29.99 , stock : 8 }, { id : 3 , product : ' Keyboard ' , price : 79.99 , stock : 12 } ]); const columns = [ { prop : ' id ' , name : ' ID ' , size : 80 , readonly : true }, { prop : ' product ' , name : ' Product ' , size : 200 , editor : ' string ' }, { prop : ' price ' , name : ' Price ' , size : 120 , editor : ' number ' , cellTemplate : ( h , { value }) => `$ ${ value . toFixed ( 2 )} ` }, { prop : ' stock ' , name : ' Stock ' , size : 100 , editor : ' number ' } ]; useEffect (() => { if ( gridRef . current ) { const grid = gridRef . current ; grid . columns = columns ; grid . source = data ; // Handle cell editing grid . addEventListener ( ' beforecellfocus ' , ( e ) => { console . log ( ' Cell focus: ' , e . detail ); }); grid . addEventListener ( ' aftercellfocus ' , ( e ) => { console . log ( ' Cell edited: ' , e . detail ); // Update data state const { row , prop , val } = e . detail ; setData ( prev => prev . map (( item , idx ) => idx === row ? { ... item , [ prop ]: val } : item )); }); } }, [ data ]); return ( < div style = { { height : ' 400px ' , width : ' 100% ' , border : ' 1px solid #ddd ' } } > < RevoGrid ref = { gridRef } /> </ div > ); } export default EditableSpreadsheet ; Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode Practical Example / Building Something Real Let's build a comprehensive financial data spreadsheet with formulas, formatting, and advanced features: // src/FinancialSpreadsheet.jsx import React , { useRef , useEffect , useState , useCallback } from ' react ' ; import { RevoGrid } from ' @revolist/revogrid-react ' ; import ' @revolist/revogrid/dist/revogrid.css ' ; function FinancialSpreadsheet () { const gridRef = useRef ( null ); const [ data , setData ] = useState ([]); // Initialize with sample financial data useEffect (() => { const initialData = [ { month : ' January ' , revenue : 50000 , expenses : 30000 , profit : 20000 }, { month : ' February ' , revenue : 55000 , expenses : 32000 , profit : 23000 }, { month : ' March ' , revenue : 60000 , expenses : 35000 , profit : 25000 }, { month : ' April ' , revenue : 58000 , expenses : 33000 , profit : 25000 }, { month : ' May ' , revenue : 62000 , expenses : 36000 , profit : 26000 }, { month : ' June ' , revenue : 65000 , expenses : 38000 , profit : 27000 } ]; setData ( initialData ); }, []); const columns = [ { prop : ' month ' , name : ' Month ' , size : 150 , pinned : ' left ' , readonly : true }, { prop : ' revenue ' , name : ' Revenue ' , size : 150 , editor : ' number ' , cellTemplate : ( h , { value }) => { return h ( ' span ' , { style : { color : ' #28a745 ' , fontWeight : ' bold ' } }, `$ ${ value . toLocaleString ()} ` ); } }, { prop : ' expenses ' , name : ' Expenses ' , size : 150 , editor : ' number ' , cellTemplate : ( h , { value }) => { return h ( ' span ' , { style : { color : ' #dc3545 ' , fontWeight : ' bold ' } }, `$ ${ value . toLocaleString ()} ` ); } }, { prop : ' profit ' , name : ' Profit ' , size : 150 , editor : ' number ' , readonly : true , cellTemplate : ( h , { value }) => { const color = value > 0 ? ' #28a745 ' : ' #dc3545 ' ; return h ( ' span ' , { style : { color , fontWeight : ' bold ' } }, `$ ${ value . toLocaleString ()} ` ); } }, { prop : ' margin ' , name : ' Margin % ' , size : 120 , readonly : true , cellTemplate : ( h , { row }) => { const margin = (( row . profit / row . revenue ) * 100 ). toFixed ( 2 ); const color = parseFloat ( margin ) > 30 ? ' #28a745 ' : parseFloat ( margin ) > 20 ? ' #ffc107 ' : ' #dc3545 ' ; return h ( ' span ' , { style : { color , fontWeight : ' bold ' } }, ` ${ margin } %` ); } } ]; useEffect (() => { if ( gridRef . current && data . length > 0 ) { const grid = gridRef . current ; // Calculate profit automatically when revenue or expenses change const updatedData = data . map ( row => ({ ... row , profit : row . revenue - row . expenses })); grid . columns = columns ; grid . source = updatedData ; // Handle cell editing const handleCellEdit = ( e ) => { const { row , prop , val } = e . detail ; const newData = [... data ]; if ( newData [ row ]) { newData [ row ] = { ... newData [ row ], [ prop ]: parseFloat ( val ) || 0 }; // Recalculate profit newData [ row ]. profit = newData [ row ]. revenue - newData [ row ]. expenses ; setData ( newData ); } }; grid . addEventListener ( ' aftercellfocus ' , handleCellEdit ); return () => { grid . removeEventListener ( ' aftercellfocus ' , handleCellEdit ); }; } }, [ data , columns ]); const handleExport = useCallback (() => { if ( gridRef . current ) { const grid = gridRef . current ; // Export functionality would be implemented here console . log ( ' Exporting data: ' , data ); } }, [ data ]); const handleAddRow = useCallback (() => { setData ( prev => [... prev , { month : `Month ${ prev . length + 1 } ` , revenue : 0 , expenses : 0 , profit : 0 }]); }, []); return ( < div style = { { padding : ' 20px ' } } > < div style = { { marginBottom : ' 20px ' , display : ' flex ' , gap : ' 10px ' } } > < h2 > Financial Data Spreadsheet </ h2 > < button onClick = { handleAddRow } style = { { padding : ' 8px 16px ' , backgroundColor : ' #007bff ' , color : ' white ' , border : ' none ' , borderRadius : ' 4px ' , cursor : ' pointer ' } } > Add Row </ button > < button onClick = { handleExport } style = { { padding : ' 8px 16px ' , backgroundColor : ' #28a745 ' , color : ' white ' , border : ' none ' , borderRadius : ' 4px ' , cursor : ' pointer ' } } > Export </ button > </ div > < div style = { { height : ' 600px ' , width : ' 100% ' , border : ' 1px solid #ddd ' } } > < RevoGrid ref = { gridRef } theme = "material" range = { true } resize = { true } rowHeaders = { true } columnHeaders = { true } /> </ div > </ div > ); } export default FinancialSpreadsheet ; Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode This advanced example demonstrates: Automatic formula calculation (profit = revenue - expenses) Custom cell templates with conditional styling Pinned columns (month column stays fixed) Real-time data updates Cell editing with validation Dynamic row addition Export functionality preparation Material theme styling Common Issues / Troubleshooting Grid not rendering : Ensure you've imported the CSS file ( @revolist/revogrid/dist/revogrid.css ). The grid requires explicit height on the container div. Data not displaying : Make sure you're setting both columns and source properties on the grid ref after it mounts. Use useEffect to ensure the ref is available. Cell editing not working : Verify that you've set editor property in column definitions and are handling the aftercellfocus event properly. Performance issues : RevoGrid handles virtualization automatically, but for extremely large datasets (millions of rows), consider implementing data pagination or lazy loading. TypeScript errors : Install type definitions if available, or create your own type declarations for the RevoGrid component and its API. Event listeners not firing : Ensure you're adding event listeners in useEffect and cleaning them up properly to avoid memory leaks. Next Steps Now that you've mastered RevoGrid basics: Explore advanced features like row grouping and aggregation Implement custom cell editors and renderers Add formula support and calculation engine Learn about column resizing and reordering Implement server-side data loading Add export/import functionality (CSV, Excel) Explore theming and customization options Check the official repository: https://github.com/revolist/revogrid Look for part 7 of this series for more advanced topics Summary You've learned how to implement advanced spreadsheet functionality with RevoGrid, including virtual scrolling, custom cell rendering, formula calculations, and real-time data updates. RevoGrid provides excellent performance for large datasets and offers extensive customization options for building enterprise-grade spreadsheet applications. Top comments (0) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Michael Turner Follow Software developer focused on Web3 infrastructure. Cross-chain systems, APIs, smart contracts. Real-world examples on GitHub. Joined Dec 21, 2025 More from Michael Turner Getting Started with ReactGrid in React: Building Your First Spreadsheet # react # webdev # javascript # tutorial Building Interactive Data Tables with React Data Grid # react # webdev # beginners # tutorial Getting Started with MUI X Data Grid in React: Building Your First Data Table # webdev # programming # javascript # beginners 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Beginners Follow Hide "A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step." -Chinese Proverb Create Post submission guidelines UPDATED AUGUST 2, 2019 This tag is dedicated to beginners to programming, development, networking, or to a particular language. Everything should be geared towards that! For Questions... Consider using this tag along with #help, if... You are new to a language, or to programming in general, You want an explanation with NO prerequisite knowledge required. You want insight from more experienced developers. Please do not use this tag if you are merely new to a tool, library, or framework. See also, #explainlikeimfive For Articles... Posts should be specifically geared towards true beginners (experience level 0-2 out of 10). 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Older #beginners posts 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu Errors during learning (c++) dolphine dolphine dolphine Follow Jan 6 Errors during learning (c++) # beginners # cpp # devjournal # learning Comments Add Comment 4 min read The Complete Windows to Linux Migration Guide MD. HABIBULLAH SHARIF MD. HABIBULLAH SHARIF MD. HABIBULLAH SHARIF Follow Jan 10 The Complete Windows to Linux Migration Guide # windowstolinux # beginners # linux # techguide 4 reactions Comments 5 comments 11 min read How Machine Learning Works? NEBULA DATA NEBULA DATA NEBULA DATA Follow Jan 6 How Machine Learning Works? # ai # beginners # machinelearning Comments Add Comment 3 min read 🪣 Thin Provisioning in LVM – Complete Step by Step Tutorial Usama Tanoli Usama Tanoli Usama Tanoli Follow Jan 6 🪣 Thin Provisioning in LVM – Complete Step by Step Tutorial # beginners # devops # linux # tutorial Comments Add Comment 4 min read SQL INJECTION Rodrino Adolfo Kupessala Rodrino Adolfo Kupessala Rodrino Adolfo Kupessala Follow Jan 11 SQL INJECTION # beginners # sql # security # webdev Comments Add Comment 1 min read The RGB LED Sidequest 💡 Jennifer Davis Jennifer Davis Jennifer Davis Follow Jan 5 The RGB LED Sidequest 💡 # showdev # arduino # hardware # beginners Comments Add Comment 3 min read Chapter 3: Quick Start Henry Lin Henry Lin Henry Lin Follow Jan 5 Chapter 3: Quick Start # beginners # programming # tutorial Comments Add Comment 12 min read 第3章:快速开始 Henry Lin Henry Lin Henry Lin Follow Jan 5 第3章:快速开始 # beginners # cryptocurrency # python # tutorial Comments Add Comment 8 min read Bitwise AND of Numbers Range: Coding Problem Solution Stack Overflowed Stack Overflowed Stack Overflowed Follow Jan 7 Bitwise AND of Numbers Range: Coding Problem Solution # challenge # coding # tutorial # beginners Comments Add Comment 4 min read I Built in Public for 5 Months. Nobody Watched. 22nd Dec. I Got Fired. Marcin Firmuga Marcin Firmuga Marcin Firmuga Follow Jan 5 I Built in Public for 5 Months. Nobody Watched. 22nd Dec. I Got Fired. # beginners # programming # career # python 2 reactions Comments 2 comments 4 min read What I Learned Building an AI Learning Platform Without Hype John Haworth John Haworth John Haworth Follow Jan 5 What I Learned Building an AI Learning Platform Without Hype # discuss # ai # tutorial # beginners Comments Add Comment 1 min read PTSD as an adaptive program Connie Baugher Connie Baugher Connie Baugher Follow Jan 11 PTSD as an adaptive program # programming # ai # beginners # tutorial Comments Add Comment 2 min read Python's else on Loops: The Feature You're Not Using Samuel Ochaba Samuel Ochaba Samuel Ochaba Follow Jan 5 Python's else on Loops: The Feature You're Not Using # python # programming # tutorial # beginners Comments Add Comment 2 min read Stop Blaming AI: The Real Reason Your Projects Fail Is Instructions, Not Intelligence inboryn inboryn inboryn Follow Jan 5 Stop Blaming AI: The Real Reason Your Projects Fail Is Instructions, Not Intelligence # ai # webdev # programming # beginners Comments 1 comment 4 min read 32+ Civil Engineer Big Data & RAG Project | Which IT roles actually fit my profile? MR.SANDIP MR.SANDIP MR.SANDIP Follow Jan 5 32+ Civil Engineer Big Data & RAG Project | Which IT roles actually fit my profile? # career # hiring # beginners # machinelearning Comments Add Comment 1 min read Getting Started with Docker Ethan Zhang Ethan Zhang Ethan Zhang Follow Jan 6 Getting Started with Docker # docker # devops # tutorial # beginners Comments Add Comment 1 min read What do you think, LinkedIn? Rohit Bhandari Rohit Bhandari Rohit Bhandari Follow Jan 5 What do you think, LinkedIn? # linkedln # digitalmarketing # beginners # ui Comments Add Comment 1 min read Stop Wasting Money on AWS—Turn This On Promise CK Promise CK Promise CK Follow Jan 5 Stop Wasting Money on AWS—Turn This On # beginners # aws # learning Comments Add Comment 1 min read How to Use RTSP Protocol in Browsers And Why Direct Integration Isn’t Possible Maria Artamonova Maria Artamonova Maria Artamonova Follow for Red5 Jan 6 How to Use RTSP Protocol in Browsers And Why Direct Integration Isn’t Possible # livestreaming # software # learning # beginners Comments Add Comment 8 min read 🎨 Design Patterns in Python: A Visual Guide Data Tech Bridge Data Tech Bridge Data Tech Bridge Follow Jan 4 🎨 Design Patterns in Python: A Visual Guide # architecture # beginners # python # tutorial Comments Add Comment 6 min read Asynchronous in JavaScript SILAMBARASAN A SILAMBARASAN A SILAMBARASAN A Follow Jan 5 Asynchronous in JavaScript # beginners # javascript # tutorial Comments Add Comment 1 min read Scrapy Debugging Techniques: Find Bugs Fast (Stop Wasting Hours) Muhammad Ikramullah Khan Muhammad Ikramullah Khan Muhammad Ikramullah Khan Follow Jan 6 Scrapy Debugging Techniques: Find Bugs Fast (Stop Wasting Hours) # webdev # programming # python # beginners Comments Add Comment 8 min read Four Sketches and a Rewire: The Path to Droid Brains Jennifer Davis Jennifer Davis Jennifer Davis Follow Jan 5 Four Sketches and a Rewire: The Path to Droid Brains # showdev # arduino # hardware # beginners Comments Add Comment 4 min read Dynamic LED Chaser with 555 Timer & CD4017 – Easy DIY Messin Messin Messin Follow Jan 5 Dynamic LED Chaser with 555 Timer & CD4017 – Easy DIY # tutorial # diy # eletronic # beginners Comments Add Comment 3 min read Day 10: Understanding the Nested `for` Loop in Java Karthick Narayanan Karthick Narayanan Karthick Narayanan Follow Jan 5 Day 10: Understanding the Nested `for` Loop in Java # java # programming # learning # beginners Comments Add Comment 2 min read loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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https://dev.to/icdpl/icd-weekend-9-czy-znasz-swoje-prawa-wynikajace-z-rodo-i-wiesz-jak-z-nich-korzystac-18-dzien-ochrony-danych-osobowych | ICD Weekend #9 - Czy znasz swoje prawa wynikające z RODO i wiesz, jak z nich korzystać? 18. Dzień Ochrony Danych Osobowych - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Internet! Czas działać (polish) Follow ICD Weekend #9 - Czy znasz swoje prawa wynikające z RODO i wiesz, jak z nich korzystać? 18. Dzień Ochrony Danych Osobowych Jan 26 '24 play Agnieszka i Ola w związku ze zbliżającym się Dniem Ochrony Danych Osobowych opowiadają o tym, jakie uprawnienia przysługują na podstawie RODO osobom, których dane dotyczą, jak można je realizować oraz odpowiadają na nurtujące Was pytania. 🔥 Link do wtyczki: https://addons.mozilla.org/pl/firefox/addon/rentgen/ Jeżeli masz pytania, propozycje lub potrzebujesz wsparcia technicznego bądź prawniczego, napisz do nas! 😊 Dane kontaktowe: https://www.internet-czas-dzialac.pl/contact/ Wesprzyj naszą fundację: https://www.internet-czas-dzialac.pl/wsparcie-fundacji/ Episode source Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Your browser does not support the audio element. 1x initializing... × 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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https://dev.to/abewheeler | Abe Wheeler - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account Forem Close Follow User actions Abe Wheeler Founder sunpeak.ai, Trigo (YC, acq). Built AI adtech at Amazon. Ship embedded ChatGPT Apps (MCP Apps) quickly with sunpeak ☀️🏔️ https://github.com/Sunpeak-AI/sunpeak ⭐️ -> ❤️ Location Austin, TX, USA Joined Joined on Dec 5, 2025 Personal website https://github.com/Sunpeak-AI/sunpeak Education USC Work Founder More info about @abewheeler Badges 2 Week Community Wellness Streak Keep the community conversation going! Post at least 2 comments for 2 straight weeks and unlock the 4 Week Badge. Got it Close 1 Week Community Wellness Streak For actively engaging with the community by posting at least 2 comments in a single week. Got it Close Writing Debut Awarded for writing and sharing your first DEV post! Continue sharing your work to earn the 4 Week Writing Streak Badge. Got it Close Currently learning MCP Apps & ChatGPT Apps Currently hacking on https://github.com/Sunpeak-AI/sunpeak Post 6 posts published Comment 14 comments written Tag 0 tags followed MCP Needs a Browser Abe Wheeler Abe Wheeler Abe Wheeler Follow Jan 5 MCP Needs a Browser # mcp # webdev # ai # react 2 reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Want to connect with Abe Wheeler? Create an account to connect with Abe Wheeler. You can also sign in below to proceed if you already have an account. Create Account Already have an account? Sign in Introducing the Sunpeak Resource Repository Abe Wheeler Abe Wheeler Abe Wheeler Follow Dec 23 '25 Introducing the Sunpeak Resource Repository # mcp # webdev # ai # react 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read Ship a ChatGPT App in 2 commands Abe Wheeler Abe Wheeler Abe Wheeler Follow Dec 17 '25 Ship a ChatGPT App in 2 commands # mcp # webdev # ai # react 1 reaction Comments 1 comment 1 min read sunpeak: ChatGPT App Framework Abe Wheeler Abe Wheeler Abe Wheeler Follow Dec 11 '25 sunpeak: ChatGPT App Framework # showdev # mcp # githunt # news 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read ChatGPT App Display Mode Reference Abe Wheeler Abe Wheeler Abe Wheeler Follow Dec 10 '25 ChatGPT App Display Mode Reference # webdev # ai # mcp # chatgpt 2 reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read How to build a ChatGPT App (MCP Apps) Abe Wheeler Abe Wheeler Abe Wheeler Follow Dec 5 '25 How to build a ChatGPT App (MCP Apps) # webdev # mcp # chatgpt # ai 2 reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read loading... 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Forem — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close # githunt Follow Hide Interesting open source repos you've discovered and want to share with the community. Create Post submission guidelines Submissions must display a GitHub repo in the body using the GitHub liquid tag, e.g. {% github developit/htm %} You should also include a summary and any opinions you may have to get the conversation started. Older #githunt posts 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu Making GitHub Portfolio Utkarsh Yadav Utkarsh Yadav Utkarsh Yadav Follow Jul 16 '20 Making GitHub Portfolio # github # githunt # git # productivity 25 reactions Comments 1 comment 1 min read git Cheat Sheet Devvill Monki Ventures Devvill Monki Ventures Devvill Monki Ventures Follow Jul 14 '20 git Cheat Sheet # github # git # githunt 9 reactions Comments 1 comment 2 min read Review our open-source project: Continuous Machine Learning ⭐ CML ⭐ Dmitry Petrov Dmitry Petrov Dmitry Petrov Follow Jul 11 '20 Review our open-source project: Continuous Machine Learning ⭐ CML ⭐ # opensource # machinelearning # datascience # githunt 13 reactions Comments 2 comments 2 min read Things I learned while building my side project Akshay090 Akshay090 Akshay090 Follow Jul 5 '20 Things I learned while building my side project # showdev # github # extension # githunt 7 reactions Comments Add Comment 3 min read Building an Intelligent QA System With NLP and Milvus Milvus Milvus Milvus Follow Jun 23 '20 Building an Intelligent QA System With NLP and Milvus # githunt # datascience # database # tutorial 12 reactions Comments Add Comment 4 min read How debugging GitHub Actions with SSH? 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https://de.linkedin.com/company/gittower?trk=organization_guest_main-feed-card_feed-actor-image | Tower | LinkedIn Weiter zum Hauptinhalt LinkedIn Artikel Personen E-Learning Jobs Spiele Einloggen Mitglied werden Tower Softwareentwicklung A Better Way to Work With Git Folgen alle 14 Mitarbeiter:innen anzeigen Dieses Unternehmen melden Info Tower is a powerful Git client for macOS and Windows. More than 100,000 developers and designers use Tower to be more productive with Git: from Git beginners to Git experts. From indie developers and startups all the way to Fortune 500 companies. Download our 30-day free trial and experience a better way to work with Git! Website https://www.git-tower.com Externer Link zu Tower Branche Softwareentwicklung Größe 2–10 Beschäftigte Hauptsitz Schönefeld Art Privatunternehmen Gegründet 2010 Produkte Tower Git Client Tower is a powerful Git client for macOS and Windows and the tool of choice for over 100,000 developers and designers. 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https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_83 | September 2023 (version 1.83) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 September 2023 (version 1.83) Update 1.83.1 : The update addresses these issues . Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the September 2023 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Accessibility improvements - Screen reader support for the pull request comments. Better Command Palette search - New "similar commands" list to help command discovery. Add custom icons to profiles - Display an icon to easily identify the active profile. Compact editor tab height - Shrinks editor tab height for larger editor region. Dedicated pinned editor row - New editor tab row supports pin/unpin via drag and drop. Go to Symbol in notebooks - Quickly navigate to code symbols in your notebook. Python debugger updates - Configure whether to step into system/library or just your code. Preview: GitHub Copilot - Test generation based on current framework and project conventions. If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Accessibility GitHub Pull Requests and Issues Comment improvements The GitHub Pull Requests and Issues extension, which allows you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues, has seen many accessibility improvements this iteration for the commenting and reviewing experience. A screen reader user is informed when they open an editor if it contains commenting ranges. A new accessibility help dialog ( editor.action.accessibilityHelp ) provides insight into commands for navigation between comment threads and ranges. Additionally, the Comment control is now accessible. A help dialog ( editor.action.accessibilityHelp ) is also available in that context to inform a user of what to expect and how to utilize the feature. There are also new commands Comments: Go to Next Commenting Range ( ⌘K ⌥⌘↓ (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+Alt+Down ) ) and Comments: Go to Previous Commenting Range ( ⌘K ⌥⌘↑ (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+Alt+Up ) ) for navigation between commenting ranges. Workbench Similar command results in the Command Palette Finding the command you're looking for can be challenging. In VS Code alone there are over 2000 commands... and with your favorite extensions, that number can soar even higher. We wanted to introduce a way to help you find what you're looking for while still keeping the speed that the Command Palette offers today. To do this, we are including a new section in the Command Palette results called "similar commands". Here are some examples: A query no longer has to "fuzzily" match to show up in the results. Like "Toggle Auto Save": If there are fuzzy results, those still show up at the top and similar commands follow: Extension contributed commands also get picked up: We think that this will really help those who struggle to remember the exact command name... let's be honest, that's pretty much all of us at some point. This is just the first cut of this new feature and still requires matching exact words in command names. In the future, you can expect improvements such as: Commands matching based on the non-visible description of the command. Better basic handling of synonyms ("toggle" and "turn on/off", "show" and "reveal", etc.) Let us know what you think! Icons for profiles You can now associate an icon with a profile . This icon will be shown in the Activity Bar in the place of the Manage gear icon. This is useful if you have multiple profiles and want to quickly identify which profile is currently active. The following picture shows the icon selection dialog while creating a new profile. The active profile icon is then shown in the Activity Bar. Editor tab height density The window.density.editorTabHeight setting allows users to reduce the tab height to a more compact size. Default editor tab height Compact editor tab height Pinned editor tabs on separate row A new setting workbench.editor.pinnedTabsOnSeparateRow has been added. When activated, pinned tabs are displayed on a separate row above the other tabs. The editor tabs automatically pin or unpin when dragged between the tab rows. Settings editor search adjustments The Settings editor now shows fewer results for a given search query to reduce noise. If you have the GitHub Copilot Chat extension installed, in addition to settings found by keyword matches, only the top five Copilot Chat setting matches are chosen, rather than the top fifteen. The search results are now also ordered by the Settings editor table of contents to show commonly used settings at the top, and to show filtered extension settings in their original order. To revert to ordering the search results by match type and score, set the workbench.settings.settingsSearchTocBehavior setting to "hide" , clear the search query, and start another search. Theme: Light Pink (preview on vscode.dev ) Improved overflow behavior for editor actions When the number of editor actions exceeds the available space, the actions overflow into the ... More Actions menu. This logic has been refined and some vital actions, like Close or Split Editor , are now excepted. This means that they will always be visible, even if the available space is limited. Color Theme picker now shows theme identifier The Color Theme picker now shows the localized name of the color theme and its string identifier next to it. This was done to help users who use a non-English language pack but only know the English name of the theme. Comments The Comments editor is used in extensions such as the GitHub Pull Request and Issues extension, where it displays pull request comments. Comment editor size The Comment editor now expands as lines are added, up to a maximum height dependent on the size of the editor that the comment is in. Open Comments view on unresolved comments The setting comments.openView has a new possible value firstFileUnresolved . Setting firstFileUnresolved causes the Comments view to open the first time per session that a file with unresolved comments is opened. Automatically collapse resolved comments By default, when you resolve a comment thread, it will now collapse. This feature can be disabled with the setting "comments.collapseOnResolve" . Editor Code Actions on Save and Auto Save You can now enable Code Actions on Auto Save in the editor. This triggers Code Actions when you save or Auto Save with window change ( onWindowChange ) or focus change ( onFocusChange ). To enable this feature or update your current settings, check Editor: Code Actions On Save ( editor.codeActionsOnSave ) and change each Code Action's setting to always . The setting values were also updated, with the current boolean values to be deprecated in favor of the string equivalent. The options are: explicit : Triggers Code Actions when explicitly saved. Same as true . always : Triggers Code Actions when explicitly saved and on Auto Saves from window or focus changes. never : Never triggers Code Actions on save. Same as false . Boolean values are still supported in this release. Notebooks Go to Symbol in notebooks With the notebook.gotoSymbols.showAllSymbols enabled, the Go to Symbol Quick Pick is populated with all code symbols in the notebook. Scrolling on cell execution You can now configure how much of the next cell is revealed when running notebook.cell.executeAndSelectBelow with Shift+Enter with the notebook.scrolling.revealNextCellOnExecute setting: fullCell - The full next cell (default). firstLine - Just the first line. none - Don't scroll at all. "notebook.scrolling.revealNextCellOnExecute": "firstLine" is shown below. Whitespace trimming support Notebooks now respect the existing three whitespace-related settings: files.trimTrailingWhitespace - Trim trailing whitespace when saving a file. files.trimFinalNewlines - Trim all newlines after the final newline in a file. files.insertFinalNewline - Automatically insert a final newline at the end of a file. These settings are applied on save, including Auto Save. Finalized notebook Code Action API Notebooks now fully support contributed Code Actions, and have a dedicated Code Action Kind to support them. If an extension author defines an action with a kind prefixed notebook.source. , on Save, the notebook editor runs that provided action against the entire notebook, rather than every cell individually. To edit the Code Actions that will run on save, you can set Notebook: Code Actions on Save in the Settings editor or edit "notebook.codeActionsOnSave" in your settings.json file. The current enablements for Code Actions were updated, with the previous boolean values deprecated in favor of enumeration equivalents. The options are: "explicit" : Triggers Code Actions when explicitly saved. Same as true . "never" : Never triggers Code Actions on save. Same as false . A third option "always" is coming soon to fully match editor Code Actions, letting users trigger notebook Code Actions upon Auto Save settings onFocusChange and onWindowChange . Languages Perl 6/Raku The Perl 6 language has been renamed to Raku (language identifier raku ), and Raku will be automatically selected as the language for .raku files. Debug JavaScript Debugger WebAssembly debugging The JavaScript debugger can now debug code compiled into WebAssembly if it includes DWARF debug information. For example, C++ code compiled using Emscripten can be debugged: Theme: Codesong (preview on vscode.dev ) To enable this, you'll want to install the WebAssembly DWARF Debugging extension, which plugs in to the built-in JavaScript debugger. Read more about this in Debugging WebAssembly . WebAssembly debugging is built upon the C/C++ Debugging Extension from the Chromium authors, and was made possible with their support. Improved Call Stack view Methods and functions in the Call Stack view will now include the name of function ( this ) context. For example, a call stack for method bar on class Foo is now displayed as Foo.bar . Remote Development The Remote Development extensions , allow you to use a Dev Container , remote machine via SSH or Remote Tunnels , or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. This release adds the ability to connect to Dev Containers using Tunnels similar to over SSH. You can learn more about this new feature in the Remote Development release notes . Contributions to extensions GitHub Copilot Improvements to /tests We have improved /tests for the Chat view and inline chat available with the GitHub Copilot Chat extension. The /test slash command is now better at detecting the testing framework you are using and will generate new tests in the same style. Also, it should be much better with suggesting names for new test files, like test_foo.py for foo.py and bar.test.js for bar.js . Inline chat goes multi-turn Inline chat now keeps all prompts of the current session, which allows you to refer to previous messages and to reply to questions. In the short video below, inline chat remembers that the user has said they are based in Tokyo, when providing a code snippet to calculate the local time and time difference to Zurich. Ask GitHub Copilot defaults to the Chat view A few months ago, we introduced an Ask GitHub Copilot option in the Command Palette so that you can take your query in the Command Palette and open it in a Copilot chat if the Command Palette didn't provide a useful answer. We gathered feedback on the preferred experience Ask GitHub Copilot should open: the Chat view in the side bar or Quick Chat. In an effort to make the first time experience more familiar, we chose the Chat view. With that said, if you would like Ask GitHub Copilot to open in Quick Chat, you can change the behavior with the askChatLocation setting: "workbench.commandPalette.experimental.askChatLocation" : "quickChat" Command Palette similar commands This iteration, we shipped the similar commands feature in the Command Palette. Copilot Chat users get an even better similar commands experience because we can use Copilot AI to determine similarity. These smarts help with synonyms and intent, and in our testing, Copilot was able to handle similarity across spoken languages as well. Finding the exact command you're looking for in the Command Palette has never been easier! Jupyter Finalized Jupyter Server Provider API for extension authors The Jupyter extension's API for contributing Jupyter Servers has been finalized. Extensions can use the API to provide a list of custom Jupyter Servers to display in the Kernel Picker. Examples of API usage can be found in the Jupyter Server Provider Sample . The JupyterHub extension also makes use of this same API. The npm package @vscode/jupyter-extension contains all of the TypeScript type definitions. JupyterHub extension There is now a JupyterHub extension that supports logging into JupyterHub and executing code against kernels from within a notebook or Interactive Window in VS Code. This extension also works in the browser in vscode.dev and github.dev . If you have any issues with this new extension or wish to provide feedback, you can file an issue in the JupyterHub extension GitHub repo . Python Python Debugger updates The Debugpy extension, which was announced a few months ago , has been renamed to Python Debugger for improved discoverability in the Marketplace. This extension now includes a new User setting debugpy.debugJustMyCode that when disabled, it allows you to step into system or third-party library code for all your applications (by default, the debugger steps only into the code that is defined in your own Python code). This was a popular feature request for those who wanted to more conveniently disable justMyCode to all of their projects, instead of having to manually configure it in all of their projects' launch.json debug configurations. To try it out, make sure you have the Python Debugger extension installed. Then open the Settings editor ( ⌘, (Windows, Linux Ctrl+, ) ), search for "debugJustMyCode", and disable the checkbox: Now once you create a launch.json file, the extension uses the value of debugpy.debugJustMyCode by default, as long as justMyCode is not specified in the file. Note that when justMyCode is specified in launch.json , its value takes precedence over the debugpy.debugJustMyCode setting. Lint on change option for Pylint extension By default, the Pylint extension only reports errors and warnings when a file is saved. There's now a new setting called pylint.lintOnChange that if set to true , instructs the extension to report errors and warnings as you type, without having to save the file. Mypy extension reporting scope and daemon mode The Mypy Type Checker extension has now two new settings to allow you to specify Mypy's reporting scope and whether to use Mypy's daemon. The first is mypy-type-checker.reportingScope , which can be set to file (the default) to enable problems to be reported only for open files in the workspace, or workspace to enable reporting for all files in the workspace. The second is mypy-type-checker.preferDaemon , which when set to true , uses Mypy's daemon ( dmypy ) instead of Mypy itself ( mypy ) to perform type checking, which can be much faster in some scenarios. Update on call argument inlay hints setting Previously, Pylance 's setting to enable inlay hints for partial call arguments ( python.analysis.inlayHints.callArgumentNames ) could only be set to true or false to enable or disable type hints for call arguments. This setting has been modified to allow more granular control over the type hints that are shown for call arguments. It can now be set to partial to disable hints for positional-only and keyword-only parameters, all to enable them, or off to disable them completely. Deprecation of Python 3.7 support As previously mentioned in our July 2023 release blog, we have dropped official Python 3.7 support in the Python extension. There are no plans to actively remove support for Python 3.7, and so we expect the extension will continue to work unofficially with Python 3.7 for the foreseeable future. Keep in mind, that all other releases of Python are now on an annual release cadence, thus, we expect to stop official support for a Python release once it reaches EOL in the first extension release of the following calendar year (for example, Python 3.8 is scheduled to reach EOL in October 2024, so the first extension release in 2025 will stop official support). GitHub Pull Requests and Issues There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests and Issues extension, which allows you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. Accessibility for reviewing PRs has been improved. Commits are shown in the Create view even when the branch hasn't been published. Review the changelog for the 0.74.0 release of the extension to learn about the other highlights. Preview Features Nearest Quick Fix keyboard shortcut There is a new setting to activate the nearest Quick Fix in a line from ⌘. (Windows, Linux Ctrl+. ) (command ID editor.action.quickFix ), no matter where your cursor is in that line. The command highlights the source code that will be refactored or fixed with Quick Fixes. Normal Code Actions and non-fix refactorings can still be activated at the cursor location. To enable this feature, check Code Action Widget: Include Nearby Quickfixes ( editor.codeActionWidget.includeNearbyQuickfixes ). Source Control Sync view This milestone's release contains an early version of the Source Control Sync view. The new view provides details about the local changes that have not been pushed to the remote branch (outgoing) and changes that have not been pulled down locally from the remote branch (incoming). The view also lets you publish a branch and sync changes (pull/push) with a remote branch. The new view is still experimental and we will continue to improve it in the coming milestones based on user feedback. You can display the new view via the scm.experimental.showSyncView setting. Please try it out and provide feedback in issue #192290 . Command Center and Debug toolbar There is a new experimental setting to show the Debug toolbar inside the Command Center. Make sure to have the Command Center enabled and configure the debug.debugToolbarLocation setting: "debug.toolBarLocation" : "commandCenter" Theme: GitHub Light Colorblind (Beta) (preview on vscode.dev ) Extension Authoring Support for Unicode character class escapes for string setting validation Unicode character class escapes are now supported in regexes to validate string and string array settings. In other words, string and string array settings can now specify a pattern field with a value such as "\\p{Letter}+" , allowing string values that only contain letters. Support for Unicode character class escapes is not available for object settings with string values at this time. Contribute to terminal menus There are two new menus that can be contributed to terminal/context and terminal/title/context , which add entries to the terminal context menu and terminal tab context menu respectively. Example usage: { "contributes" : { "menus" : { "terminal/context" : [ { "command" : "terminalTest.sendText" } ], "terminal/title/context" : [ { "command" : "terminalTest.sendText" } ] } } } New env.onDidChangeShell event There is a new env.onDidChangeShell: Event<string> event that fires when the value of env.shell changes. keytar removed from VS Code Back in June, we moved the SecretStorage API over to using Electron's safeStorage and included a deprecation and removal plan of the now archived and unmaintained keytar module from VS Code. We didn't remove keytar initially because some extensions were still importing/requiring keytar directly (this was recommended before the SecretStorage API existed, but not after the SecretStorage API was released). Based on product telemetry and Insiders builds without keytar , the usage of keytar has dropped and we are ready to remove keytar entirely from VS Code. What does this mean for my extension? If you use the SecretStorage API, nothing . We had been migrating secrets out of keytar since June so all of your secrets should be migrated over already if they were touched in the span of two months. If you are still using keytar directly in your extension, there are a couple of options for you to consider: (recommended) Use the SecretStorage API that VS Code provides on the ExtensionContext . This API is cross-platform and works on all platforms that VS Code supports. It is also maintained by the VS Code team, will continue to be maintained, and has been a part of the VS Code API for years at this point. (not recommended) You can bundle the keytar module with your extension. Keep in mind that keytar is a native node module, which means that you will need to publish a platform specific extension for each platform you want to support. --disable-keytar is renamed to --use-inmemory-secretstorage The --disable-keytar flag disabled persisting secrets on the machine when the SecretStorage API was used. This was primarily used in CI environments that often didn't have a keyring configured because without it, VS Code would throw an error when the SecretStorage API was used without a keyring available. Since we've removed keytar , this flag needed a new name. We've now marked --disable-keytar as deprecated in favor of --use-inmemory-secretstorage . In the future, we will consider removing --disable-keytar , but it's not going away in the near future. Lastly, we want to thank all the incredible extension authors that acted quickly to move off of keytar and ensure their users have a great and secure experience with secrets in VS Code! Language Server Protocol New versions of the Language Server Protocol npm packages have been released (protocol@3.17.5, client@9.0.1 and server@9.0.1). Highlights of the release are: Added proposed inline completion request. Added proposed formatting ranges request. Added proposed refresh request for folding ranges. This changed the shape of the folding range feature since the API needs to expose the event emitter and is a breaking change. To get to the provider, you now need to use the following code: client . getFeature ( lsclient . FoldingRangeRequest . method ). getProvider ( document )?. provider ; Various bug fixes . Engineering Floating editor windows exploration We have started to explore how to pull editors out of the workbench window into their own windows. This feature is our highest upvoted feature request and we plan to have a first working version for our Insiders users to play with in October. All editors across all windows operate on the same underlying editor models, so that changes made in one window are reflected live in all other windows. You can create any editor layout in the floating windows and open any editor you like, in as many windows as you want. For our first working version, we envision that the Status bar would also be present in the floating windows so that editor information - such as line numbers and selection ranges - is shown. Stay tuned for more development in the coming months! vscode.dev is now cross origin isolated Cross origin isolation is now enabled for vscode.dev . This enables new powerful features like shared array buffers, which are the building block for cross file TypeScript support, Python execution in the web, and vscode-wasm-wasi in general. Settings Sync troubleshooting We have added a new developer command Developer: Download Settings Sync Activity that downloads all your Settings Sync activity, both on cloud and on your local machine, including the logs. This will help us troubleshoot issues with Settings Sync. We have also created a new view to browse the downloaded activity. You can open the view by running the command Settings Sync: Show Synced Data and enabling SYNC ACTIVITY (DEVELOPER) view. You can load the downloaded sync activity by selecting the Load Sync Activity button in the view as shown below. Notable fixes 190679 Theme color icon.foreground is inconsistent and does not work with .svg Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @starball5 (starball) @ArturoDent (ArturoDent) @tamuratak (Takashi Tamura) @codespearhead (Code Spearhead) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @antonioprudenzano (Antonio Prudenzano) : added focus_in and focus_out events only on HTMLElement elements PR #181761 @AVividLight (Michael Bethke) : Fix Minimap AutoHide with StickyScroll Lines Running Together PR #188499 @balaji-sivasakthi (Balaji Sivasakthi) : Resolved conflicts between System High Contrast (HC) and VS Code High Contrast in ExtensionEditor PR #189773 @bricker (Bryan Ricker) : fixes typo in description for terminal.integrated.environmentChangesRelaunch configuration PR #191841 @ChaseKnowlden : Add banner for macOS 10.13 and 10.14 PR #192928 @Connormiha (Mikhail) : Simplify getting rangesToUpdate PR #192079 @gabritto (Gabriela Araujo Britto) Add custom Node option to run TS Server PR #191019 [typescript-language-features] Add option for excluding library symbols in "Go to Symbol in Workspace" PR #192798 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) Tab separator setting referred to the same setting twice (fix #192497) PR #192577 Improve messages on empty timeline (#_169205) PR #193369 @hamirmahal (Hamir Mahal) : feat: copy command and output in integrated terminal PR #192217 @hsfzxjy (hsfzxjy) : Faster __vsc_escape_value for bash PR #190899 @jeanp413 (Jean Pierre) Fixes terminal group relative size not preserved PR #192519 Fix terminal context menu not hiding after running action PR #193314 @justanotheranonymoususer Remove superfluous arg in git smoke.test.ts PR #173194 Clarify git api usage PR #174222 @khubaibalam2000 (KhubaibAlam) : Added hyperlink to Hot Exit for more details PR #193354 @lukaszsamson (Łukasz Samson) : Fix invalid match on exited DAP event PR #192117 @NikoRaisanen (Niko Raisanen) : fix: do not set this._sequence to undefined if path title not windows path PR #193232 @qingpeng9802 (Qingpeng Li) : improve es5ClassCompat robustness PR #163541 @rebeccadee (Rebecca Dodd) : Update info-needed label name in contributing doc PR #182528 @sandersn (Nathan Shively-Sanders) : Copilot-based TS refactors PR #192602 @sbmelvin (Stephen Melvin) : Fixed import paths not being updated when multiple files are moved PR #191403 @troy351 : add fallback for css var --vscode-sash-hover-size PR #187678 @WardenGnaw (Andrew Wang) Add support for debugger type for selectAndStartDebugging PR #193156 Add support to de-emphasize debuggers in run list PR #193157 @weartist (Hans) Adjust openview PR #191907 add fill selection text for quick search PR #191956 @wickles : Detect more scoop git bash paths PR #192085 @yiliang114 (易良) : fix: Close #191880, Repair command cannot be searched by keyword after localization PR #191953 @ykrx (Yulian Kraynyak) : Add info marker to minimap PR #189282 Contributions to vscode-css-languageservice : @romainmenke (Romain Menke) : add support for ::slotted , :host , :host-context , :nth-child(1n of .foo) and :nth-last-child(1n of .foo) PR #356 Contributions to vscode-html-languageservice : @johnsoncodehk (Johnson Chu) : Implement findDocumentSymbols2() PR #152 Contributions to vscode-languageserver-node : @AviVahl (Avi Vahl) : fix: ensure bundlers pick up esm version PR #1326 Contributions to vscode-pull-request-github : @hsfzxjy (hsfzxjy) : Add a refresh button in the header of comment thread PR #5229 On this page there are 15 sections On this page Accessibility Workbench Comments Editor Notebooks Languages Debug Remote Development Contributions to extensions Preview Features Extension Authoring Language Server Protocol Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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Report Abuse Yogendra Prajapati Posted on Jan 9 How to Build a website in 2026: Complete Beginner’s Guide (The Smartest Way to Launch Online This Year) # webdev # beginners # tools # business If you’re reading this in 2026 and thinking, “I need to build a website, but I don’t know where to start,” you’re in the perfect place — and the perfect year. Just a few years ago, beginners had to wrestle with hosting dashboards, endless plugins, confusing editors, and layouts that broke without warning. Today, the landscape has shifted completely. More than 70% of consumers now visit a website before making a purchasing decision, and nearly half say they won’t trust a business that doesn’t have one. So when you decide to build your website, you’re not simply putting content online — you’re building the first point of trust in your business. And here’s the best part: AI tools, automated builders, and integrated platforms have reduced the learning curve dramatically. Over 60% of new websites built in the last year were created using no-code or low-code systems, meaning the era of “only developers can build websites” is far behind us. In this beginner’s guide, we will walk through the journey of building a website in 2026 — step by step, with clarity and flow — so you feel confident at every stage. And since this year is all about smarter, faster, simplified website creation, you’ll also explore how an all-in-one platform like DotcomPal can make the process even smoother. But before you start creating anything, you need to understand why building a website this year is one of the smartest businesses moves you can make. Why Building a Website in 2026 Is the Most Important Move You’ll Make? Building a website is not optional anymore — it’s the backbone of your digital identity. And in 2026, the reasons go far deeper than “you need online presence.” * Your Website Is the Only Digital Space You Truly Own * With algorithms shifting constantly across social platforms, many businesses have realized that they don’t control their visibility — unless they have a website. Over 75% of businesses that faced social-platform drops reported losing revenue until they strengthened their website presence. A website is stable, predictable, and fully under your control. Search Intent Still Lives on Websites Despite the rise of AI tools, search engines still send over 50% of their traffic to websites. Visitors want structured, trustworthy information — and they trust websites 3× more than social posts for buying decisions. * Credibility Starts with Your Website * Studies show that 72% of users judge a business’s credibility based on its website design. And if a website loads slowly or looks outdated, over 40% abandon it within seconds. Your website communicates competence long before your product does. Websites Drive Revenue More Predictably E-commerce still generates trillions globally, and service-based businesses report that their website is the #1 channel for acquiring qualified leads. Funnels, blogs, landing pages, and content hubs all begin with a solid website foundation. In brief: - Your website isn't just an online identity — it’s your authority, your credibility, your discoverability, and a key driver of your sales engine. Now, Let’s move into Step 1: clarifying your purpose. Step 1 — Before You Build Anything, Get Clear on What Your Website Should Do- Before you choose a platform or design anything, you must answer one simple but powerful question: “What do I want my website to do for my business?” Here’s a scenario: Imagine you’re building a SaaS website. If your purpose is to convert visitors into trial users, then your homepage, pricing page, and CTAs will follow a clear, focused pattern. But if you're a freelancer, your purpose might be to showcase credibility and encourage inquiry submissions. Purpose Creates Focus: - Without a defined purpose, websites become overwhelming — too many pages, unclear messaging, and scattered CTAs. That’s why businesses with a clearly defined website objective convert 2–3× more visitors on average. A few Website Purpose examples: - SaaS - Convert visitors to free trials or demos. Agency - Get prospects to book a consultation. Freelancer - Showcase portfolio and secure client inquiries. Coach/Consultant - Generate leads for sessions or programs. When your purpose is clear, your website becomes a strategic tool — not a random collection of pages. Once purpose is established, your next decision is platform selection. Step 2 — The Platform You Choose Today Shapes the Business You’ll Have Tomorrow: - In 2026, you have more choices than ever. But the right platform isn’t the trendiest one — it’s the one that aligns with your skills, speed, and goals. Let’s look at the landscape through a beginner’s eyes. * Traditional CMS (like WordPress) * Powerful but requires hosting, plugins, maintenance, security patches, and patience. These systems offer flexibility but come with hidden costs. Over 45% of website issues reported by small businesses come from plugin conflicts, outdated themes, or server problems. Drag-and-Drop Website Builders (Wix, Squarespace, Webflow) These simplify design but often fall short when businesses need funnels, automation, or deeper integrations. Many users end up stacking multiple tools, increasing both cost and complexity. AI-Powered All-in-One Platforms (DotcomPal) This is where beginners gain a major advantage. Platforms like DotcomPal make website building up to 70% faster by auto-generating layouts, content blocks, and page structures using AI. And because the website, funnels, videos, blog, popups, and analytics live inside one system, you avoid the fragmentation that causes most website issues. This is the approach I recommend for beginners — and even for pros who want speed. Now that you know what platform to choose, let’s secure your digital identity. Step 3 - Pick a Domain That Supports Your Brand: - A great domain is short, memorable, and brandable. In 2026, visitors have strong expectations around naming quality — nearly 60% say they trust shorter domains more. Even more interesting, data shows that keyword-heavy domains no longer outperform brandable ones. Search engines prioritize trust, authority, and clarity over keyword stuffing. Your domain is your brand’s home. Choose a name that feels timeless, not trendy. With your brand’s home secured, let’s discuss where your website will live — hosting. Step 4 — Hosting vs. Managed Infrastructure in 2026: - In past years, hosting was the most intimidating part of website building — servers, security certificates, downtime, complicated dashboards. But in 2026, you don’t have to worry about server administration at all. Managed Infrastructure Platforms like DotcomPal automatically handle: speed optimization global delivery through CDNs uptime monitoring security & SSL responsive performance This is why over 68% of new websites last year were launched on platforms with built-in hosting — because beginners want simplicity and reliability. Step 5 — Designing Your Website — Creating a Space Visitors Instantly Feel Connected To: - Beginners often think design is about fonts and colors. In 2026, design is about clarity, confidence, and guiding visitors toward action. Imagine a visitor landing on your homepage for the first time. Their eyes scan left to right, top to bottom, searching for: “What does this business do?” “Is this relevant to me?” “Can I trust this?” “What should I do next?” Your design must answer those questions in seconds. * What Today’s Visitors Expect * Clear value upfront and Simple navigation Human photos or real screenshots Fast loading and A strong, confident CTA Scannable sections and Consistent branding DotcomPal makes this effortless with drag-and-drop sections, global branding, and AI-assisted layout creation based on your industry. Your design should always serve your purpose — the purpose we set back in Step 1. And now that the framework looks good, it's time to build out the core pages. Step 6 — Build the Essential Pages With Conversion in Mind: - Every website needs essential pages, but what sets high-performing websites apart is how these pages guide users. Let’s break down the most important ones: * Homepage * Your homepage is your digital handshake. It should instantly communicate: Who you help What you offer Why it matters What action to take Include a strong CTA, short proof elements, and a simple explanation of your value. About Page Tell your story — people connect with people. Explain your mission, experience, and what drives your work. Services / Products Page Explain what you offer, who benefits, and how it works. Clear explanation combined with clear benefits and solid proof leads to higher conversions. Even small clarity improvements can increase engagement dramatically. Contact Page Your contact page often determines whether a lead engages further. Keep it simple, friendly, and accessible. Blog Blogs remain one of the highest ROI channels in digital marketing. Companies with blogs generate 55% more website visitors and significantly more leads. Now that your core pages are ready, let's ensure search engines and visitors trust you. Step 7 — How Google Sees Your Website in 2026 — And What Makes It Trust You: - Search engines today prioritize signals that reflect authenticity, clarity, and visitor satisfaction. What Matters Now Websites that demonstrate experience, expertise, authority, and trust consistently outperform generic or thin content. A few important insights: Websites with author bios and real examples are trusted significantly more. Pages with clear structure and detailed explanations rank higher. Fast load times reduce bounce rates by up to 45%. Websites with SSL, updated policies, and transparent contact info convert better. DotcomPal supports these requirements with built-in SEO controls, analytics, and structured layouts. And once trust is established, you're ready for the moment you've been building toward — launch. Let’s finalize the process. Step 8 — Publish & Test Your Website the Right Way: - The moment your website goes live should feel confident, not chaotic. Your launch checklist includes: Mobile preview all CTAs page speed SEO settings and links contact form domain mapping DotcomPal simplifies this by giving you a clean preview, responsive display modes, automatic SSL, and one-click publishing. A smooth launch sets the foundation for long-term success. Now let's explore why dotcompal is uniquely suited to accelerate your journey. How DotcomPal Helps You Build & Scale Effortlessly: - DotcomPal is built for entrepreneurs, SaaS founders, freelancers, agencies, and creators who want speed without sacrificing professionalism. With DotcomPal, you get: AI Website Builder Funnels and templates for every industry Landing Pages CRM Blog Popups & Bars Analytics Video hosting Domain setup For beginners, this means easy creation. For businesses, this means faster launches and less overhead. But to make this more real, let me show you two examples. Case Study 1 — SaaS Startup Launches Website in 1 Day A SaaS founder needed a website that explained the product, captured leads, and scheduled demos. Using DotcomPal: AIPal generated the homepage, Features page, and Pricing layout Designer Sections handled testimonials & FAQs The founder connected domain and added a demo-booking form The website went live the same day * RESULT: * Within three weeks, they recorded their first 40 demo bookings — without hiring developers. Case Study 2 — Freelancer Builds Portfolio Website in 3 Hours A freelance designer wanted a simple website to showcase work and attract clients. Using DotcomPal: They chose a design-focused template Uploaded portfolio images Added an About section Connected social links Used DotcomPal’s contact form to receive inquiries RESULT: They booked their first lead through the website within 24 hours. Advanced Website Building Tips for 2026 (That Beginners Always Miss): - The moment your website goes live, something interesting happens — you realize the real journey has just begun. Every beginner feels it. But the ones who grow fast understand a few simple truths early on. 1. Every page should lead visitors somewhere Your website must gently guide visitors somewhere — a page, a CTA, a next step. When people land on a page and don’t know what to do next, they leave. When the path is clear, they convert. * 2. Updating your site regularly builds trust * Updates matter, more than beginners expect. A website that never changes looks forgotten. Even small updates — a new testimonial, a refreshed section, a recent case study — signal that your business is active and trustworthy. 3. Analytics reveal what your audience truly wants Numbers aren’t numbers; they’re behavior. They show where visitors get excited, where they hesitate, and where they leave. Once you understand their journey, improving your website becomes easy. 4. Content creates momentum that compounds over time A single good blog can attract traffic for months. Consistent content builds authority, improves SEO, and creates a steady flow of new visitors who already trust you. In short, a website isn’t a finished project — it’s a living asset. The more attention you give it, the more it gives back. Conclusion: - If you’ve reached this point, you’re no longer just “learning how to build a website.” You’re ready to launch something real. In 2026, your website is more than pages and design — it’s the home of your brand, your authority, and your growth. And now you know exactly how to build one that feels professional, trustworthy, and built for results. You just need the right platform to bring it to life. DotcomPal gives you everything in one place — AI website builder, funnels, blog, videos, analytics — so you can launch fast and grow confidently. 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https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/416734/community-asks-sprint-announcement-january-2026-custom-site-specific-badges | Community Asks Sprint Announcement – January 2026: Custom site-specific badges! - Meta Stack Exchange Skip to main content Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow , the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers. Visit Stack Exchange s-popover#show" data-s-popover-placement="bottom-start" /> Loading… Tour Start here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have What's Meta? How Meta is different from other sites About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company, and our products current community Stack Exchange Meta Stack Exchange help chat your communities Sign up or log in to customize your list. more stack exchange communities company blog Log in Sign up Home Questions Unanswered Tags Chat Users Stack Internal Stack Overflow for Teams is now called Stack Internal . Bring the best of human thought and AI automation together at your work. Try for free Learn more Stack Internal Bring the best of human thought and AI automation together at your work. Learn more Stack Internal Knowledge at work Bring the best of human thought and AI automation together at your work. Explore Stack Internal Community Asks Sprint Announcement – January 2026: Custom site-specific badges! Ask Question Asked 6 days ago Modified today Viewed 2k times 19 Our seventh Community Asks Sprint is kicking off soon! The Community Asks Sprint is the time for a team of our developers to devote a portion of time purely to requests for improvement you’ve submitted. You can learn more from our first ever Community Asks Sprint announcement . This time, we’re focusing on a community building opportunity that you’ve asked for a long time ago: custom, site-specific badges . Our vision for this feature is to add a way for Community Managers (CMs) to create and maintain a list of custom badges on a per-site basis, and then grant moderators the ability to award them to their site’s users at their discretion. The motivation for focusing on this idea is based upon events that some communities have been running across the network, such as the Puzzling site’s Puzzling Advent event and Arqade’s Screenshot of the Week events . The effort moderators and community members have put into events like these has not gone unnoticed. Aside from bragging rights, the only way for communities to currently award winners anything is for moderators to bounty off some of their own reputation. We believe that custom badges can be a great alternative for rewarding participants of community events. We don’t believe badges should be limited to just contests, though. This is an opportunity for communities to recognize members who go above and beyond in various ways, and want to reward them for actions and contributions that the current badge and reputation systems simply do not capture. Here’s the current vision for this idea: Creating Badges : After community consensus is reached on a Meta post, a moderator escalates a Meta post to the attention of the CM team by applying the status-review tag, denoting that their community would like a new badge for a specific purpose that has community buy-in. All requests for a new custom badge must supply the following details: Badge Name Badge Description Badge Class (Bronze, Silver, Gold) Criteria for earning the badge This could be winning an event, performing an act of community service that is above and beyond, whatever makes sense! Please try to avoid overlap with existing badges that cover normal situations. These are meant to be special! A CM reviews the request, ensures that the need is sufficient, and works with the moderator team if there are any discrepancies or issues with the badge’s details. The CM handling the request creates the badge. Awarding Badges : A community member participates in a way that demonstrates they deserve a badge. A moderator notices this behavior and navigates to their profile, and presses a button to award them a badge. The moderator selects which badge to award from the list of custom badges. The moderator grants the badge from this page, and the badge is distributed to the recipient. When we’re finished with this sprint, we’ll share what we were able to accomplish and work on next steps for communities to start workshopping some new badges. We’re excited to start on this idea, but we want to ensure that this will meet the needs of your communities. What sorts of issues do you have with this idea? What problems do we need to prepare for that you foresee? If it’s an idea that’s out of scope for this sprint, we’ll be able to return to it at a later date, but we still want your feedback! Further, what sorts of situations do you think your communities would want to create a badge for? Are there any use-cases you can think of that are exceptional and interesting? We’re interested in hearing about them! discussion company-update featured badges community-asks-sprint Share Improve this question Follow asked Jan 6 at 15:18 Spevacus Staff Mod 37.4k 11 11 gold badges 85 85 silver badges 189 189 bronze badges 13 12 This is cool, I could see it being a nice little award for screenshot of the week winners GammaGames – GammaGames 2026-01-06 15:51:22 +00:00 Commented Jan 6 at 15:51 2 iunno. this feels like it's just one or two steps beyond being someone just editing "I did a thing!" into their profile. But maybe this is just me not caring about badges/achievements in general. Usually when something is gamified, in a "earn a reward" way, the gamification is there to encourage you to earn all of the rewards or as many as you can, and when you realize there's rewards you'll never earn the gamification aspect tends to fall apart. Not necessarily a reason to not do this, but... more something i'd hope communities would keep in mind when deciding what badges to create. :shrug: user400654 – user400654 2026-01-06 17:39:22 +00:00 Commented Jan 6 at 17:39 3 This seems really fun! As long as the badge definitions are clean-cut and the award process simple (e.g. no more effort than hosting an existing event already is), then I think the cost-benefit of sites getting a new fun toy at the cost of minimal moderator effort is super worthwhile. Future issues with bickering and fairness and criteria cost can be dealt with as they come up, and aren't inherent to custom badges as a whole. This will be a cool feature for sites that's just trivial and fun , and I like that. zcoop98 – zcoop98 2026-01-06 21:38:43 +00:00 Commented Jan 6 at 21:38 17 TeX.SE is still waiting for the previous “Community Asks Sprint” feature to be enabled on our site. Max Chernoff – Max Chernoff 2026-01-06 22:59:54 +00:00 Commented Jan 6 at 22:59 10 Did I missed the post where community asked for this? And more generally: how do community decide what is in those sprints? I keep missing those discussions. Is thee specific tag I can follow? talex – talex 2026-01-07 09:14:40 +00:00 Commented Jan 7 at 9:14 3 Aren't the reputation mechanism and the existing badges there to reward useful behavior with Shiny Magical Internet Points? What shortcomings do these have that motivates adding yet another mechanism, and one that is purposely engineered to work off the subjective impressions of mods? Stephan Kolassa – Stephan Kolassa 2026-01-07 12:53:12 +00:00 Commented Jan 7 at 12:53 6 I'm against this, because if you're ever on the outs with a mod, then you'll be shut out of getting these badges, and it'll become yet another way to demonstrate that unpopular opinions don't belong on that stack. The issues this would cause with fairness and clique-building outweigh its benefits. I think flair would be a better way to go. FeliniusRex – FeliniusRex 2026-01-07 14:05:10 +00:00 Commented Jan 7 at 14:05 8 @MaxChernoff Thank you for the reminder, and apologies for the delay. I've enabled that feature on your site. Spevacus – Spevacus Staff Mod 2026-01-07 15:16:22 +00:00 Commented Jan 7 at 15:16 5 @talex In the post, I linked to Is it possible to have site-specific badges? , which is an older but well-supported request for the idea. In these sprints, generally, the development team chooses a category to focus on and they collect a series of well-received requests or bug reports to work on. In this case, we're focusing on this idea and making it work as best as we can. Spevacus – Spevacus Staff Mod 2026-01-07 15:27:05 +00:00 Commented Jan 7 at 15:27 8 @Spevacus so why it is called community sprint if community have no way to decide what goes in it? I don't think that post from 14 years ago can count as community input. talex – talex 2026-01-08 08:32:03 +00:00 Commented Jan 8 at 8:32 3 @Spevacus also that post doesn't mentioned feature you going to implement. Only thing in common with your post and old one is mention of custom badges. You completely invented that feature on your own. talex – talex 2026-01-08 08:42:10 +00:00 Commented Jan 8 at 8:42 5 It feels a bit of poor timing of implementing a feature that asks moderators to do even more work at a time when they are begging you for tools to reduce their workload Sayse – Sayse 2026-01-08 10:48:05 +00:00 Commented Jan 8 at 10:48 This seems like a nice idea, but aren't there drastically more important quality-of-life requests that could be focused on instead? DBS – DBS 2026-01-12 16:35:08 +00:00 Commented 16 hours ago Add a comment | 7 Answers 7 Sorted by: Reset to default Highest score (default) Date modified (newest first) Date created (oldest first) 46 What sorts of issues do you have with this idea? What problems do we need to prepare for that you foresee? The general thoughts that come up with any idea that comes with manually awarding things by moderators: I expect the number of accusations of favoritism or gatekeeping to go up. Also, I expect badgering for badges. I am honestly never a fan of anything that adds more responsibilities to moderators, the system itself should be made accountable for this and not the moderators, in my opinion. I am thus really not a fan of this idea for anything other than those things that can come with clear, simple rules like all badges have already: "you participated in a contest/placed first in a contest" is not much different from "you did X amount of review tasks/answered Y questions with tag Z in a good way", and it helps a lot to avoid/prevent the whining, drama and badgering that are bound to come with badges for stuff that's fuzzy, and unquantifiable, like "going above and beyond". And when the rules for a new badge are this simple and quantifiable, the awarding should just be automatic (like the old hats from winterbash), it saves moderators effort and being in the middle of this whole thing. Awarding such things automatically probably already comes with enough issues, like the ones winterbash had with insincere participation that only caused more moderation load, just for the hat... Share Improve this answer Follow answered Jan 6 at 17:16 Tinkeringbell Mod 44.6k 13 13 gold badges 76 76 silver badges 202 202 bronze badges 13 10 This is a fair point of view and one I expected from you when the subject of moderators being able to award early access to privileges came up, where your concern was the same. One thing I will say on this is that, in order for a badge to be added to a site, it'll need to have community buy-in, so you'd have the opportunity to be vocally against badge requests where it seems like you'd be badgered for them. Further, you'd be under no obligation to award them if you didn't want to. Spevacus – Spevacus Staff Mod 2026-01-06 17:20:54 +00:00 Commented Jan 6 at 17:20 16 While it would be preferable for these badges to be automatically awarded for e.g. event winners, the onus would be on the developers to configure them in a way that allows for this, and that's a big undertaking. Making these manually awarded and putting that power in the hands of moderators is our best stab at an intermediary where CMs can create them quite easily, and mods can dish them out just as easily. Spevacus – Spevacus Staff Mod 2026-01-06 17:22:11 +00:00 Commented Jan 6 at 17:22 Maybe... the tool that hands these badges out can have some creative ways of filtering/selecting users built-in. Like a button/dropdown/component on posts/answers themselves for meta or site based things like the screenshot contest would make that specific style of custom badge pretty easy to award to users who "earned" them. A pin tool to pin the badge you're working with at the moment to the top of the list so you don't need to look for it every time you reward it, etc user400654 – user400654 2026-01-06 17:30:46 +00:00 Commented Jan 6 at 17:30 @Spevacus This is not my preferred implementation. I too share the concerns laid above. However, you could at least put some guardrails around this to make it less controversial. For example, the badges can only be awarded to quantifiable/measurable activities. Let's say Arqade community wants to award a badge to most popular screenshot in the past month; that's fine. One can get the score of posts in a certain period, and audit the badges awarded. But awarding a badge to the person with most downvotes on answers should not be allowed, cause the community cannot verify that. M-- – M-- 2026-01-06 17:32:42 +00:00 Commented Jan 6 at 17:32 12 @M-- It sure should be auditable. It also shouldn't require a mod more than mere seconds to confirm a badge is actually earned, if it really has to be manual. I don't want to have to spend minutes to trail through e.g. all questions tagged "contest-2026" or from last month to find/confirm that a user wrote three answers with a positive score... Tinkeringbell – Tinkeringbell Mod 2026-01-06 17:37:58 +00:00 Commented Jan 6 at 17:37 6 @Spevacus "Further, you'd be under no obligation to award them if you didn't want to." Good thing you'd mentioned this, I was thinking about that. Do CMs have any plans for how to handle it when regular users really want them/want them more and all moderators for a site don't? Tinkeringbell – Tinkeringbell Mod 2026-01-06 17:39:38 +00:00 Commented Jan 6 at 17:39 @Spevacus One other related issue to the concerns with accusations of favoritism, especially if the criteria are not completely objective, is if a site moderator, or a community manager, is the recipient. Do you think this is a significant enough concern? If so, do have any plans about how to potentially address this, e.g., perhaps have the option of a relatively independent community manager give the badge instead? John Omielan – John Omielan 2026-01-06 19:08:59 +00:00 Commented Jan 6 at 19:08 2 @JohnOmielan - " “The Council of the Royal Society is a collection of men who elect each other to office and then dine together at the expense of this society to praise each other over wine and give each other medals.” ~ Babbage. Richard – Richard 2026-01-06 20:01:07 +00:00 Commented Jan 6 at 20:01 1 I suppose such badges awarded by mods could work for the sites that run various challenges on their meta. The winner is decided by public voting so that rules out favoritism. Lundin – Lundin 2026-01-07 07:40:17 +00:00 Commented Jan 7 at 7:40 1 @Lundin jup. But the post also says: "We don’t believe badges should be limited to just contests, though." Which is what I'm definitely not a fan of. Tinkeringbell – Tinkeringbell Mod 2026-01-07 07:49:01 +00:00 Commented Jan 7 at 7:49 1 @Spevacus Imho, you are reducing what is a community issue to a personal one. Maybe Tinkeringbell does indeed fear for herself - added work, pestering etc. But the headless robot the company would create wouldn't be just a "Tink problem". Domesticated moderation, double standard, "local culture" idiocy... all problems shog9 knew very well and things that never went away. So... I don't feel the urge to give more bullets to bad actors. Especially since we still can't vote AGAINST a mod despite the many requests. SPArcheon – SPArcheon 2026-01-07 08:39:59 +00:00 Commented Jan 7 at 8:39 2 @Tinkeringbell I will see what I can do about auditability. We're trying to utilize the existing badge framework as much as we can here, so we'd need to adjust badge display to account for manually-granted badges and indicate that they were awarded by a moderator. Unfortunately, due to the technical implications involved, we will not be able to associate a particular badge with a particular post. While badges support a "You earned (badge) for (action)" configuration, making this dynamic to support this feature would be a grand undertaking. Spevacus – Spevacus Staff Mod 2026-01-07 15:30:31 +00:00 Commented Jan 7 at 15:30 1 I have no idea how practical this is, but we already have a reasonably strong communities around SEDE. Could we make it so the mods could set up a badge to be awarded based on a query run against side every time its exported? Then the awarding would be impartial, but dev effort would fall on the community. user1937198 – user1937198 2026-01-11 14:14:01 +00:00 Commented yesterday Add a comment | 24 One with a practical point: If this goes through, don't forget to update the help center. Currently, /help/what-are-badges states: "They are based on data, rather than being arbitrarily awarded by a human." , which will no longer be true after implementation of this feature. Share Improve this answer Follow answered Jan 7 at 10:06 Tinkeringbell Mod 44.6k 13 13 gold badges 76 76 silver badges 202 202 bronze badges 1 10 I'll make sure to note this as something to follow up on. Thanks for the reminder. Spevacus – Spevacus Staff Mod 2026-01-07 15:08:14 +00:00 Commented Jan 7 at 15:08 Add a comment | 20 (My first thoughts were "*groan*, more work", and "I'm going to get accused of favoritism", so basically what Tinkeringbell said, but there's some more points I want to make...) Humans have imbalanced skills (e.g. at Chinese.SE, I simply can't judge Cantonese posts with the same competence as Mandarin posts). Humans are unable to apply uniform attention to posts, so the posts mods frequent will end up with extra badges. It'd be very hard to get this consistent across sites. I feel like we need to emphasize that we're not under any illusion that these rewards are impartial, even calling them something like "mod's choice". (Also, can mods award themselves badges? Can mods awards other mod badges?) Maybe there are better choices than (permanent) badges, like bounties or "temporarily pinned posts" or the ability to increase a question's hotness. Also, why mods, and not users with sufficient rep (in a tag)? That seems more "community" to me. If you want me to publicly click "I'm a mod and I really like this post" every now and then (and some algorithm does something with that knowledge), I could probably do that. But if you want me to conduct some kind of competition for badges, then that's another thing entirely. Share Improve this answer Follow answered Jan 7 at 2:38 Rebecca J. Stones 25.8k 6 6 gold badges 52 52 silver badges 119 119 bronze badges 1 9 I want to stress that these badges are site-specific and must have community buy-in (including from moderators, who will be awarding them) before we consider adding them for mods to grant. So, if awarding badges for a criteria that sounds like it's up to too much interpretation feels unwieldy to you (on big sites I'd ESPECIALLY agree with you) then be sure to be vocally against such suggestions. The criteria are free-form, so you could use them to generate engagement in a particular way that's underrepresented on your site(s), rather than use them as pseudo-bounties. Spevacus – Spevacus Staff Mod 2026-01-07 15:11:35 +00:00 Commented Jan 7 at 15:11 Add a comment | 15 I wonder if this could be used to promote more activity of specific types on sites that are struggling. Exactly 10 years ago, there was an initiative that I've always found inspiring: when Mechanics SE was struggling to graduate due to having not enough users with enough rep , other site stats being sufficient, the site's highest-rep user (now a moderator, but not yet one at that point) stepped up with a proposal in order to increase site engagement and voting: for every user earning an Electorate badge that month, he would personally give up 100 reputation in a bounty, assuming the badge earner had a worthy answer to award it on. Long story short, it worked and the site graduated later that year. I can't find it now in chat transcripts, but I recall that I casually proposed a similar initiative on Literature SE in its beta days, to encourage voting and get more users with rep-based privileges, but the then moderators didn't like the idea and I never formally went ahead with it. The only problem with what was done on Mechanics SE is that the criteria for the Electorate badge aren't necessarily the best: it's only about voting on questions , but on most SE sites, answers are where the real expertise is and they deserve to be rewarded at least as much as questions. But, what if each site could customise its own activity-based badges according to what sort of activity is needed on the site? Not getting enough questions? Create a custom version of the Curious/Inquisitive/Socratic badges! Random idea: "post a question every day for 15 days consecutively"? Not getting enough votes? Create a custom version of the Civic Duty/Electorate/Vox Populi badges! Random idea: "vote 100 times on answers"? Not getting enough answers? Create a custom badge for posting a lot of well-received answers (for some values of "a lot" and "well-received")! Too many old unanswered questions? Create a custom version of the Revival/Necromancer badges! Random idea: "answer 10 unanswered questions with a score of at least 3 on each answer"? And so on, and so on - you get the point. It could be great if the mod team and/or meta community of a struggling site could get together and say " this is what we need to improve our site's activity, and here's how we can gamify it with badges to reward activity", and then actually start issuing those rewards and hopefully improving activity levels as desired. Share Improve this answer Follow answered Jan 7 at 7:43 Rand al'Thor 36.8k 12 12 gold badges 70 70 silver badges 144 144 bronze badges Add a comment | 7 I like the idea of sites being able to customize how they recognize community members. I think giving site-specific “flair” instead of badges might be better so that it doesn’t disrupt existing badges, and there is a distinction between site-specific awards and standard badges. One of the cool things about this is that there will be achievements that you can only get by participating on a particular site - I think they should be highlighted more than just adding to a badge total on the user card. Winter Bash hats were great because you could change them up to show off different ones. I know that custom flair is a heavier lift than additional badges, but I think it would be more effective, and hopefully the code for the winter bash hats can be repurposed so you aren’t starting from scratch. It side-steps issues with mixing badges that can be earned on any site with badges awarded on one site by moderators. It gives site-specific awards more visibility across the network. It lets people “rep” their site and maybe generate more interest in it. I can imagine something like everyone with 2K+ reputation getting site flair and having events where members are asked to display it for a particular week to raise awareness of the site. Share Improve this answer Follow answered Jan 7 at 12:56 ColleenV 33k 7 7 gold badges 63 63 silver badges 137 137 bronze badges 0 Add a comment | 5 What sorts of issues do you have with this idea? What problems do we need to prepare for that you foresee? Mostly echoing everyone else's concerns about potential avenues for favouritism/abuse ala voting rings etc. But I feel this could be solved fairly easily: Awarding badges should be subject to a "review and approve" by a fellow moderator Certain mod tasks require another moderator to approve (such as changing the Close reasons, redacting revisions etc). Could Badge awards be subject to the same level of scrutiny? I feel like that would help alleviate some of the raised concerns regarding favouritism - it's not "one" mod handing out awards like candy, it's a process that must involve at least 2 people (perhaps more, on larger sites like Stack Overflow). If I can make a feature-request , which would also alleviate the potential for badges to be awarded to "mod favourites": Consider making "Award badges" a tool unlockable by regular community members While "just for mods" is... fine, I really think some thought should be given to making it a fully fledged non-mod feature granted through site participation. The sites are gamified with reputation tiers tied to site privileges, but lately it seems there's a push to remove/reduce the thresholds for participation, while at the same time, new features are just given to mods with little further thought. I think awarding badges is a pretty great case where having high-rep community members able to propose awards for fellow community members makes a lot of sense. Now I'm not saying that users should be able to just hand out badges without oversight: they should be subject to being approved or denied. A consensus should be reached with many community members the same way close/reopen and delete votes require a consensus (or perhaps one mod, handling it more similar to a flag). Likewise, perhaps the amount of badges one user can propose over a given timeframe is limited. I just think that there are regular community members with their finger on the pulse in places that the 3-10 site mods might not be across. Rather than have them put up a whole Meta post requesting the mods award someone a badge for always saying "welcome!" to newbies in the chat, or for chipping away at a thankless retag job over 6 months, give them a way to propose them directly. What sorts of situations do you think your communities would want to create a badge for? Broadly speaking? Recognizing Effort . Any of the sorts of situations in which it's obvious that a user is going above and beyond for no reward. Stuff like always being welcoming in the comments on new users' posts, participating in tag reorganisation efforts, editing to update old answers, and so on. Are there any use-cases you can think of that are exceptional and interesting? Mini-mod - Consistently raises thoughtful custom flags As an example: we have a few users who do the grunt work of investigating AI cases for us, and supply links and explanations as to why it's thought to be AI-generated, making the mod's job pretty simple. It'd be nice to be able to recognise that in some small fashion <Topic> Champion In lieu of ever getting something like Collectives on the Network sites - for users who regularly participate in a handful of related tags - answering, editing, closing/reopening, etc, all within a certain topic. On a site like Arqade, where every game has it's own tag, it's easy for a long running series (like Pokemon) to have lots of tags with < 200 questions apiece. So a user's tag badge progress displays as low, but their expertise in the area is actually quite high, and should be recognised. Arqade's Screenshot of the Week (all of these could potentially be automated, if that's an option): Screenshot of the Week Winner Winning Streak - Something commemorating win streaks? Win SotW 3 times in a row Win SotW 10 times People's Champion Get more votes on your submission than the winner, after the competition has already closed Screenshot of the week - Organiser Rewarding some of our community members who consistently help run the contests, whether that's handling the posting of the question, updating the Hall of Fame or Topic-collection posts, answering questions/clarifying rules etc Share Improve this answer Follow edited yesterday answered 2 days ago Robotnik 7,024 2 2 gold badges 27 27 silver badges 40 40 bronze badges Add a comment | 3 Automation Please make it possible to award these through: a place where one may paste a SEDE query (it doesn't have to be a complicated page, it would be up to the mod to write and validate the query using SEDE directly) that returns the users that should be granted the badge and how many times. Specify a format and it'll be up to us to write valid queries. Run the query [ weekly | daily | monthly ] and award based on the results. The stack exchange API. create an endpoint and allow mod accounts to hit it to award a specific badge to a specific user. It would then be up to the mods or the community to run a script that decides when to grant a badge. This is an obvious upgrade to the proposed "add something else for the mods to do" and it allows for the creation of objective badges. Having both would allow non-technical users to re-use SEDE queries shared by moderators of other sites, without needing to learn hosting, running scripts or what an API is, while allowing technical users to surpass the limitations of SEDE queries if they desire, at their own costs. Share Improve this answer Follow answered 22 hours ago Themoonisacheese 1,450 5 5 silver badges 6 6 bronze badges 2 While I understand where this request is coming from, from a technical perspective this would be a very large undertaking. That said, there is nothing stopping you from defining a badge in such a way that your profile can only qualify for the badge by appearing in a SEDE query, and ensuring that that standard is maintained, albeit manually. Spevacus – Spevacus Staff Mod 2026-01-12 17:02:04 +00:00 Commented 15 hours ago i mean, i don't know stack echange internals, so i won't try to comment on that, but one would think automating away "a moderator unconditionally grants a badge to everyone in a SEDE query" would be easier than you let on. Themoonisacheese – Themoonisacheese 2026-01-12 19:50:46 +00:00 Commented 12 hours ago Add a comment | You must log in to answer this question. Start asking to get answers Find the answer to your question by asking. Ask question Explore related questions discussion company-update featured badges community-asks-sprint See similar questions with these tags. Welcome! Welcome! 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https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_84 | October 2023 (version 1.84) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 October 2023 (version 1.84) Update 1.84.1 : The update addresses these issues . Update 1.84.2 : The update addresses these issues . Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the October 2023 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: More audio cues - New audio cues to indicate clear, save, and format activity. Activity bar position - Move Activity bar to the top for compact display. Hide editor tabs - Show multiple, single, or no editor tabs. Maximize Editor Groups - Quickly expand the active Editor Group. Python improvements - Better run code in terminal, easier virtual environment creation. FastAPI tutorial - Learn about developing Python FastAPI apps with VS Code. Gradle for Java - Improved support for Java Gradle projects. Preview: GitHub Copilot - Chat "agents", generate commit messages, terminal support. If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Accessibility Clear, format, and save opt-in audio cues When audioCues.clear is enabled, a sound indicates that the terminal, a notification, or the chat responses have been cleared. In files and notebooks, audioCues.save and audioCues.format can be set to play on user gesture or always for each event. While disabled, an ARIA alert is used instead and can be customized with accessibility.alert.format and accessibility.alert.save . Windows magnifier synced The Windows magnifier now follows the cursor in VS Code properly. Accessible View improvements By default, a user's cursor is positioned at the bottom of the terminal Accessible View; to preserve the position instead, you can set terminal.integrated.accessibleViewPreserveCursorPosition to true . The Accessible View can be hidden with accessibility.hideAccessibleView , useful if sharing one's screen with an audience of sighted users. The Accessible View now closes when a user starts typing and focuses the prior element for a smoother work flow. Text editor in window title focused view Last iteration, we added a ${focusedView} variable to window.title . We now also indicate when a Text Editor is focused. Workbench Customize Activity bar position You can now move the Activity bar to the top of the Side Bar as shown in the following video. When the Activity bar is placed on the top, the Accounts and Manage buttons are moved to the far right of the title bar. Note: This is supported only when the custom title bar is enabled ( "window.titleBarStyle": "custom" ). Hide Editor Tabs Users are now able to hide editor tabs by setting workbench.editor.showTabs to none . Other showTabs options are multiple (default) and single to show a single editor tab for the active editor. Maximize Editor Group There is a new command View: Toggle Maximize Editor Group ( ⌘K ⌘M (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Ctrl+M ) ) to maximize an editor group. This will hide all other groups and adds a button to the tab bar, allowing the user to restore the previous layout. If the setting workbench.editor.doubleClickTabToToggleEditorGroupSizes is set to maximize , users can double-click on an editor tab to maximize and unmaximize the editor group. Similar settings search in the Settings editor Like the Command Palette, the Settings editor now runs a similar settings search to gather more relevant results for a given query. The implementation is currently in an early stage, and you can expect improvements over the next few iterations. Confirmation for opening protocol links When a protocol link for a file or workspace opens in VS Code, a dialog will now ask for confirmation: Protocol links can either point to a local file (for example vscode://file/path/to/file ) or to a remote file (for example vscode://vscode-remote/ssh-remote+[USER@]HOST[:PORT]/path/to/file ). For each case, there are new settings to disable this behavior: security.promptForLocalFileProtocolHandling - For local protocol links security.promptForRemoteFileProtocolHandling - For remote protocol links Editor Nearest Quick Fix keyboard shortcut There is a new setting to activate the nearest Quick Fix in a line from ⌘. (Windows, Linux Ctrl+. ) (command ID editor.action.quickFix ), no matter where your cursor is in that line. Previously a preview feature, Code Action Widget: Include Nearby Quick Fixes ( editor.codeActionWidget.includeNearbyQuickFixes ) is now enabled by default. The command highlights the source code that will be refactored or fixed with Quick Fixes. Normal Code Actions and non-fix refactorings can still be activated at the cursor location. Multi-document highlighting Initial support for code highlighting across multiple documents was added via the setting Editor: Multi Document Occurrences ( editor.multiDocumentOccurrencesHighlight ). This initial implementation features only textual occurrences, with support for semantic highlighting coming in the future. Source Control Force push using --force-if-includes This milestone there is now support for the --force-if-includes option, which is an auxiliary option to --force-with-lease added in Git 2.30. The new option ensures that commits that are being force-pushed were created after examining the commit at the tip of the remote reference, and reduces the chance of losing commits when auto fetch is enabled. You can disable the use of --force-if-includes by disabling the git.useForcePushIfIncludes setting. Notebooks Scroll on Execute improvements How the next cells are revealed when executing through notebooks with Shift+Enter was improved to help focus on the output. This also reduces the amount of cell movement when re-executing cells that already have output. IPython stack trace rendering Exception stack traces from IPython now render clickable links to help navigate to the error. This will only apply if the Jupyter extension does not alter the stack trace first: "jupyter.formatStackTraces": false . Debug JavaScript Debugger Improved Event Listener Breakpoints view The Event Listener Breakpoints view is friendlier and is now presented as a tree with checkboxes: Better handling of sourcemap renames When code is compiled with a bundler, variables can be renamed. This is especially common with imports in all bundlers, and certain local identifiers in esbuild . The debugger is now aware of scopes each rename applies to, which fixes many snags users historically hit. This requires the debugger to parse the syntax tree of compiled modules. This is done in a background thread and only when renames are detected, but the behavior can be disabled by setting "sourceMapRenames": false in your launch.json to avoid any performance impact. Remote Development The Remote Development extensions , allow you to use a Dev Container , remote machine via SSH or Remote Tunnels , or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. Highlights include: You can now log into Tunnels using your Microsoft account. Connect to Dev Containers over SSH and Tunnels now supported on Windows. You can learn more about these features in the Remote Development release notes . Contributions to extensions GitHub Copilot Streaming inline chat The GitHub Copilot Chat extension's inline chat can now make progressive text edits and "types" at the rate at which a response is being received. This is a more natural experience than the previous behavior of waiting for the entire chat response to be received before applying it to the editor. Not all edits are insertions, and for replacements Copilot sometimes has a hard time figuring out where to start. In those cases, streaming might not yet work as expected. Stay tuned for improvements in this area. Chat agents This iteration, we built a new way to interact with Copilot Chat: agents . Agents are like experts who have a specialty that they can help you with, and you can talk to them in the chat by mentioning them with the @ symbol. Currently, there are two agents: @workspace has context about the code in your workspace and can help you navigate it, finding relevant files or classes. @vscode knows about commands and features in the VS Code editor itself, and can help you use them. Each agent also supports a few slash commands, and the slash commands that you may have used before should now be used with an agent. For example, /explain is now @workspace /explain . But as a shortcut, you can also just type / for a list of completions that will automatically expand to the full agent and command. @workspace The @workspace agent uses a meta prompt to determine what information to collect from the workspace to help answer your question. One approach used by the meta prompt is to look back at your conversation history to resolve ambiguous words/phrases in a question. For example, if you ask @workspace What does it do? , the meta prompt will now consider the history to figure out what it actually is and what information to collect to answer the question. The meta prompt also uses a wide set of terms, including more synonyms, to generate a list of potentially relevant terms. File paths and symbols in @workspace responses are clickable links. This makes it easy to navigate to the code that Copilot is referring to. The @workspace agent respects the .gitignore and .copilotignore when deciding which files from the workspace to index. Agents replace slash commands The new agents replace the functionality of slash commands such as /createWorkspace and /createNotebook with added slash modifiers: /createWorkspace --> @workspace /new /createNotebook --> @workspace /newNotebook /explain --> @workspace /explain /fix --> @workspace /fix /test --> @workspace /test /vscode --> @vscode /api Try out the new agents, and type /help for more tips! Commit message generation Copilot Chat can now generate commit messages based on the pending changes using the new "sparkle" action in the Source Control input box. Import grouping Generated imports are now always put to the top of the file or below existing import blocks. This is supported for most common programming languages. Improved /explain context You can ask Copilot Chat to explain a code selection in your active editor either through the @workspace /explain command or through the Explain with Copilot action in the context menu. Copilot Chat now includes the implementations of referenced symbols such as functions and classes, leading to more accurate and useful explanations. This works best across files when you have an extension contributing language services installed for one of the following languages: TypeScript/JavaScript, Python, Java, C#, C++, Go, or Ruby. Persistent chat view state Previously, the Copilot Chat view was initially hidden and then later shown. The Copilot Chat view now remains active between window reloads so you don't have to manually reopen it. Additionally, the Chat view now guides you through the process of signing into GitHub and activating your free trial of GitHub Copilot. Chat using configured display language By default, Copilot Chat now initially responds using your configured display language in VS Code. You can override this automatic behavior by configuring github.copilot.chat.localeOverride . Reduce welcome message verbosity You can now control whether Copilot Chat greets you with a verbose welcome message when you first start a conversation by configuring github.copilot.chat.welcomeMessage . The options are first (default), always , and never . Terminal Quick Fixes When a failed command is run in the terminal, Copilot will now offer a Quick Fix to explain what happened. This can be triggered via the sparkle icon ( ⌘. (Windows, Linux Ctrl+. ) ) next to the current terminal prompt. Terminal command suggestions Copilot can now offer CLI command suggestions via the ⌘I (Windows, Linux Ctrl+I ) keybinding when the terminal is focused. This brings up Quick Chat with @workspace /terminal pre-filled: This /terminal slash command is optimized for suggesting shell commands using the current shell. The quality of suggestions and UX will see more improvements in the next release. Improved surfacing of Run in Terminal action When a code block has a shell language type, the Run in Terminal action is now surfaced on hover of the code block: Inline chat can reply with terminal commands The inline chat can now reply with commands to be run in the terminal: Python Improvements to run line in the terminal The Python extension has improved the behavior of sending lines to the Python REPL ( Shift+Enter ) when no code has been selected to run. Previously, when you placed the cursor on a line of Python code and pressed Shift+Enter , the Python extension would send the exact line content to the REPL, even if it would fail, for example, due to being part of a multi-line command. With the new experimental Smart Send feature, the Python extension sends the smallest block of runnable code surrounding the cursor position to the REPL for execution. This ensures that only complete and executable sections of code are sent to the REPL. The cursor will also be automatically moved to the next executable line, to provide a smooth experience when executing multiple chunks iteratively. To try it out, you can add the following User setting: "python.experiments.optInto": ["pythonREPLSmartSend"] . While this feature is currently behind an experiment, we expect it to be the default behavior in the future. If you have feedback or suggestions on how we can further improve this feature, please let us know! Theme: Catppuccin Macchiato (preview on vscode.dev ) Improvements to Python linting extensions We have made several improvements to our supported linting extensions to allow for a more configurable and flexible experience with your favorite Python tools. The Pylint , Mypy and Flake8 extensions now offer settings that allow you to specify glob patterns for files that you wish to exclude from linting. This can be useful if you are working with a large codebase with many subprojects, and want to exclude certain folders from being linted. These settings are "pylint.ignorePatterns" , "mypy-type-checker.ignorePatterns" and "flake8.ignorePatterns" . These extensions also support cwd settings, which allows you to specify the working directory for the linter. This setting has been updated to support the variable ${fileDirname} , so the working directory can be dynamically set to the parent folder of the file you have open in the editor. This is useful if you are working with mono repos, and want the linter working directory to be dynamically updated as you open files from different subprojects. These settings are "pylint.cwd" , "mypy-type-checker.cwd" and "flake8.cwd" . The default value of the "mypy-type-checker.preferDaemon" setting was changed (only applicable to the Mypy extension). Previously, it was set to true , which meant that the Mypy daemon would be used by default. After receiving feedback, we changed the default value to false . If you are wondering which value would be best for you, our recommendation is to use the Mypy daemon if you enabled the Mypy reporting scope to be the entire workspace ( "mypy-type-checker.reportingScope": "workspace" ) for performance reasons. Otherwise, if the reporting scope is set to the current file, we recommend you use the Mypy executable that shipped with the extension. Deprecated built-in linting and formatting features With all the work and improvements made to the linting and formatting extensions in VS Code, we have deprecated the built-in linting and formatting features that are shipped in the Python extension. This includes all the linting and formatting commands as well as settings ( python.linting.* and python.formatting.* ). We recommend that you remove these deprecated settings if you are still using them, and use the supported linting and formatting extensions instead. If you are using a linter without a supported extension, check out the community-contributed Ruff extension . Ruff is a Python linter written in Rust and supports various linters such as pyflakes, pycodestyle, pydocstyle, and more. Recently support was added for using Ruff as a formatter in VS Code ( "[python]": { "editor.defaultFormatter": "charliermarsh.ruff" } ). You can also create your own linter or formatter VS Code extension for your favorite Python tool. Check out our Python Tools Extension Template for a quick start. Create environment notification Virtual environments are a recommended way to work with Python projects with dependencies that need to be installed. They offer isolation and reproducibility and are very popular in Python projects. For this reason, the Python extension now displays a notification when you attempt to run or debug a Python file or project with listed dependencies when you don't have a virtual environment selected on your workspace. This notification provides a quick way to create a new virtual environment through the Python: Create Environment command. If you already have a virtual environment on your workspace, you have the option to select it, or delete and recreate it. This notification can be disabled by setting python.python.createEnvironment.trigger to off . Virtual environment deactivation helper A couple of months ago we announced a new experimental feature for terminal activation using environment variables , to enhance your development workflow by automatically activating the selected environment in the terminal without the need for explicit activation commands. However, since there are no explicit activation scripts working, the deactivate command was no longer working when this experiment was enabled. The Python extension will now detect when you attempt to run the deactivate command and show a helper notification to guide you on how to add scripts for your shell so the command will work again when the environment is activated through environment variables. It also offers a button to open your shell profile file for you to add the necessary scripts. You can find the full documentation on how to add the necessary scripts for your shell on the vscode-python wiki . If you are not in the experiment and would like to try out this feature, you can add the following User setting: "python.experiments.optInto": ["pythonTerminalEnvVarActivation"] . Improvements to test output We've made significant improvements to how you can view and interact with the test output in the Python extension when the pythonTestAdapter experiment is enabled, announced a few months ago . Previously, output from test discovery and execution was inconsistently scattered across the Python Test Log output channel and the Test Results panel, with some information being duplicated in both. To consolidate the experience, output related to test execution is displayed in the Test Results panel, and test discovery in the Python output channel. To learn more, read our related vscode-python wiki . This new approach also supports colorization in the output if you are using Pytest and set "python.testing.pytestArgs": ["--color=yes"] in your settings.json . Colorization only works for test execution in the Test Results panel and will not work for discovery or for output in the Python Test Log panel. There is also a new button Show output to easily open the Test Logs from the Test Explorer view when errors on test discovery occur. Platform-specific versions of the Python Debugger extension The Python Debugger extension now ships platform-specific versions, so that only the necessary platform-specific files are installed on every update. This reduces the size of the extension and helps improve startup time. Tensorboard extension The Tensorboard functionality has moved out of the Python extension into a standalone Tensorboard extension. If you have any issues with this new extension or wish to provide feedback, you can file an issue in the Tensorboard extension GitHub repo . Jupyter Execute with Precedent/Dependent Cells With the Jupyter extension, you can now run all precedent or dependent cells of a target cell from the dropdown menu next to the Cell Run button. This is still a preview feature and can be enabled with the jupyter.executionAnalysis.enabled setting and the notebook.consolidatedRunButton setting. This feature is currently powered by the Pylance extension so you will need to install the latest Prerelease version of Pylance to use this feature. VS Code Speech We are introducing a new extension to bring voice support to VS Code! The new VS Code Speech extension integrates into GitHub Copilot Chat to enable voice-to-text transcription services for Chat input. Once installed, a microphone icon appears and when selected, begins filling Chat input with text based on the transcribed results of your voice. The transcription is computed locally on your machine and does not require a connection to the internet. GitHub Pull Requests and Issues There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests and Issues extension, which allows you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. Projects are displayed and can be added from the Pull Request description webview. Integrated with GitHub Copilot to generate the PR title and description from the PR Create view. PRs checked out with the GitHub CLI ( gh pr checkout ) are recognized by the extension. Review the changelog for the 0.76.0 release of the extension to learn about the other highlights. Preview Features Floating editor windows We continued exploring how to pull editors out of the workbench window into their own windows and now want to invite the VS Code Insiders community to play with this exciting new feature and provide feedback. Make sure to install VS Code Insiders and run the new View: Move Active Editor into a New Window command on editors to open them in a floating window. We still have to figure out many issues and provide missing features , but we are optimistic that we can enable this feature in Stable in the near future. Thanks for testing! WASM-WASI support for Language Servers Support for language servers in WASM/WASI was added to the experimental wasm-wasi-core extension. There is also an extension showcasing a simple language server written in Rust and compiled to WASM in the vscode-wasm repo . The extension depends on the language server crate maintained by the Rust analyzer team . Extension authoring Improved test runner There is now a command-line runner and extension for VS Code to make running tests for extensions easier. Extensions using the new approach can run in VS Code's testing UI. While some migration is required, this usually only takes a few minutes. Read the VS Code Testing Extensions documentation for more information. Finalized TestMessage.contextValue API You can provide a contextValue on TestMessage s to be shown when users take actions on those messages. Additionally, two new menu contributions points are available, testing/message/context and testing/message/content . The former is displayed on the message in the Test Results tree view, and the latter is displayed over the message in the editor. For example, this might be used to provide an action to update a fixture in snapshot testing: Read more about contextValue in issue #190277 . Updated codicons The following new icons were added to our codicon library: copilot git-fetch mic mic-filled thumbsup-filled thumbsdown-filled coffee game snake vr chip music piano New theme colors textPreformat.background : Background color for preformatted text segments Root folder icons per name File icon themes authors can now define name specific icons for root folders using the new properties rootFolderNames and rootFolderNamesExpanded . You can review the File Icon Theme guide for more information. Proposed APIs Every milestone comes with new proposed APIs and extension authors can try them out. As always, we want your feedback. Here are the steps to try out a proposed API: Find a proposal that you want to try and add its name to package.json#enabledApiProposals . Use the latest @vscode/dts and run npx @vscode/dts dev . It will download the corresponding d.ts files into your workspace. You can now program against the proposal. You cannot publish an extension that uses a proposed API. There may be breaking changes in the next release and we never want to break existing extensions. Support configuring data sent to extensions via Issue Reporter A new proposed API lets extension authors send additional data via the Issue Reporter. export interface IssueUriRequestHandler { // Handle the request by the issue reporter for the Uri you want to direct the user to. handleIssueUrlRequest (): ProviderResult < Uri >; } export interface IssueDataProvider { // Provide the data to be used in the issue reporter. provideIssueData ( token : CancellationToken ): ProviderResult < string >; // Provide the template to be used in the description of issue reporter. provideIssueTemplate ( token : CancellationToken ): ProviderResult < string >; } export namespace env { export function registerIssueUriRequestHandler ( handler : IssueUriRequestHandler ): Disposable ; export function registerIssueDataProvider ( provider : IssueDataProvider ): Disposable ; } You can provide a URI via handleIssueUrlRequest to have the extension issue filed externally on GitHub, or provide a template string and extension data string for provideIssueData and provideIssueTemplate in order to send additional extension data to GitHub via the Issue Reporter. Read more about this proposal in issue #196863 . File watchers with custom exclude rules This milestone we added a proposed API for creating file system watchers with full control over exclude rules: export interface FileSystemWatcherOptions { /** * An optional set of glob patterns to exclude from watching. * Glob patterns are always matched relative to the watched folder. */ readonly excludes ?: string []; } export function createFileSystemWatcher ( pattern : RelativePattern , options ?: FileSystemWatcherOptions ): FileSystemWatcher ; This new API gives your extension full control over the file watcher, irrespective if it's a recursive or non-recursive watcher or whether it wants to watch inside or outside the workspace. User or default configured exclude rules for file watching will not apply, so you can be sure to receive only the events you subscribed to. Engineering Windows 32-bit support ends There is no longer support for Windows 32-bit VS Code. If you're still on the 32-bit build of VS Code, you should update to the 64-bit version. Extensions and documentation Gradle for Java Java development in VS Code just got easier with the improved Gradle for Java extension. The pre-release version has better support for building Gradle projects thanks to adopting the Build Server Protocol (BSP). Similar to other protocols used in VS Code, for example the Language Server Protocol (LSP), the BSP provides an abstraction layer between development environments and build tools such as Gradle. To try out the new Gradle support, install both the Extension Pack for Java and pre-release version of the Gradle for Java extension. You can learn more about Gradle and the BSP in this recent blog post from the Java extension team . FastAPI tutorial FastAPI is a modern and fast web framework for building Python APIs, and has become more and more popular thanks to its simplicity and performance. You can now learn how you can get the best out of VS Code and the Python extension to create and debug FastAPI applications through our new FastAPI Tutorial ! Custom Layout user guide There is a new Custom Layout article describing layout customization for the workbench and editors. There you'll learn how to modify VS Code's main UI elements such as views, panels, and editors to fit your preferred workflow. Topics include: Primary and Secondary Side Bars Panel position and alignment Pinned editor tabs Editor group layout and more Notable fixes 194812 ToC shows up while doing search while workbench.settings.settingsSearchTocBehavior set to hide 195722 Blank settings editor when having network issues Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @starball5 (starball) @ArturoDent (ArturoDent) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @amaust (Andrew Maust) : Fixes Aria Label Showing [Object object] PR #195929 @Cazka : Fix typo for incrementalNaming setting PR #194900 @Charles-Gagnon (Charles Gagnon) : Fix arrow nav on dropdown action buttons focusing hidden dropdown PR #167662 @christian-bromann (Christian Bromann) : Only render notebook container if visible PR #188226 @Connormiha (Mikhail) : fix: simplified map+flat PR #193949 @futurist (James Yang) : fix: dom.test.ts typo PR #195249 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) Correct the CLI helptext for --profile PR #193766 Allow hiding of launcher on Run and Debug title bar when debugging PR #193812 Preselect correct row in Extension Log Level quickpick (fix #194515) PR #194517 Show Reload Required buttons simultaneously after updateAllExtensions (#_163627) PR #195421 Show trust editor tab icon correctly for "window.density.editorTabHeight": "compact" (fix #196209) PR #196212 Centre numbers vertically in top activity bar badges (fix #196691) PR #196696 Correct the #196696 fix which caused oval badges PR #196715 Upsize progress badge on top activity bar to match #196696 change PR #196724 @harbin1053020115 (ermin.zem) fix: fix editor progress position when enabled pinnedTabsOnSeparateRow PR #195314 feat: support iconThemes definitions for root folders PR #195319 @hsfzxjy (hsfzxjy) : Fix faster __vsc_escape_value PR #194459 @jeanp413 (Jean Pierre) : Fixes websocket doesn't handle ping frames correctly PR #194436 @jiawei-hong (Wei) : styles: only needs to be set border-right-width is none if it is not … PR #195078 @jruales (Joaquín Ruales) : Skip regex.replace() cost when there's nothing to replace PR #194854 @Jvr2022 (Jvr) cleanup unused files in .github PR #189066 Fix grammar PR #194970 @k-yle (Kyℓe Hensel) : fix syntax highlighting for .git-blame-ignore-revs PR #194584 @MichaelChirico (Michael Chirico) : Update org in reference repo PR #194415 @MrYuto (Yuto Liyosa) Make OpenDisassemblyViewAction an Action2 PR #195623 Resolve absolute file target links in tsconfig (#_195514) PR #195759 @sandeep-sen (Sandeep Sen) : Adding mgmt libraries for Go + changing matcher logic for Go PR #191036 @SimonSiefke (Simon Siefke) : fix: memory leak in menu PR #196302 @tats-u (Tatsunori Uchino) : Add support for --force-if-includes to force push more safely PR #187932 @tisilent (xiejialong) Disable transform optimization SettingsTree PR #179095 Terminal: fix rename and injection PR #194621 fix #191201 PR #194965 @vuittont60 : fix typos PR #195562 @whscullin (Will Scullin) : Make sure link fragment is preserved PR #193743 @yiliang114 (易良) feat: Add the logo of the built-in extension PR #192999 fix: to #157015 fix view label command localized PR #193544 fix: Close #195980, Fix contribute points default display for extensions PR #195984 Contributions to vscode-js-debug : @OnesAndZer0s (OnesAndZer0s) : feat: Tidying Up of Instrumentation Breakpoints PR #1853 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @manandre (Emmanuel André) : Fix NotebookDocumentSync example PR #1831 On this page there are 15 sections On this page Accessibility Workbench Editor Source Control Notebooks Debug Remote Development Contributions to extensions Preview Features Extension authoring Proposed APIs Engineering Extensions and documentation Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_38#_debugging | August 2019 (version 1.38) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. 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Downloads: Windows: x64 | Mac: Intel | Linux: deb rpm tarball snap Welcome to the August 2019 release of Visual Studio Code. There are a number of updates in this version that we hope you will like, some of the key highlights include: Preserve case for global search and replace - Keep letter casing across multi-file search/replace. Settings editor string array validation - Checks min, max, enum values, and glob patterns. Adjust cursor surrounding lines - Keep your cursor centered in the editor. Copy and revert in the diff editor - Easily copy or restore deleted content. Go to Line supports negative line numbers - Quickly jump to the end of a file. MDN Reference link for HTML and CSS - Links to MDN documentation directly from IntelliSense. Add missing await Quick Fix - Find overlooked awaits in asynchronous code. Debugging data breakpoints - Debugger breaks when tracked values change. VS Code icon repository - Official product icons available for extension authors. Alpine Linux distro support - Both for the WSL and Dev Containers extensions. If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to see new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. And for the latest Visual Studio Code news, updates, and content, follow us on Twitter @code ! Workbench Preserve case in Search and Replace In the 1.37 release, we added a Preserve Case option to the editor's Find/Replace control. The same option is now available as the AB icon in global search and replace. There is also a new case preservation mode for hyphen-separated words. Updated cancel search icon When running long searches, we've updated the icon used to cancel a search to better represent the action. Validation for string array settings The settings editor now displays errors for array-of-string items if the current value does not satisfy the specified minItems , maxItems , item.enum , or item.pattern schema. Link protection for outgoing links VS Code now shows a prompt before opening outgoing links. You can open the link directly or trust specific domains to bypass this prompt. With the Configure Trusted Domains button or command, you can enable/disable link protection for specific domains or all outgoing links. Explorer improvements Top-level resource creation We have improved the process of creating top-level files and folders in the Explorer. There are now three ways to create a file or folder in the root of the File Explorer: Scrolling beyond the last element in order to invoke the context menu on the empty space. Pressing Escape clears both focus and selection in the Explorer thus making the title area actions execute on the Explorer root. Using a context menu on the scroll bar. Open file and preserve focus It is now possible to open a file in preview from the Explorer while keeping focus in the Explorer. The new command is filesExplorer.openFilePreserveFocus and by default, it can be triggered via the Space key. Explorer file naming There is a new setting, explorer.incrementalNaming , to control duplicate file naming, which can have the values simple or smart . simple - Appends the word "copy" at the end of the duplicated name potentially followed by a number. This is the current VS Code stable behavior. smart - Adds a number at the end of the duplicated name. If a number is already part of the name, increment that number. Maximize editor toggle command A new command Toggle Editor Group Sizes ( workbench.action.toggleEditorWidths ) will toggle between maximizing the active editor group and evening out the editor group widths. Grid layout for the workbench The layout engine of the workbench has been rewritten to use the same grid widget as the editor area itself. This work has been in progress for some time and Insiders builds have had this enabled by default for the past couple iterations. The setting is workbench.useExperimentalGridLayout and will now be enabled by default. Toggling the editor area / Maximizing the panel The new engine provides more flexibility for the workbench layout in the future. For now, this manifests itself with the ability to hide the editor area. There is a new command available with the grid layout, Toggle Editor Area that will hide the editor area and allow the panel (for example Output or Debug console) to fill the layout. The Toggle Maximized Panel command also has the same effect. This means that a maximized panel is now truly maximized without the tiny gap previously left of the editor. Below you can see the maximized Integrated Terminal: The editor will automatically reappear if you try to open a file from anywhere such as the panel or sidebar. Hide individual macOS Touch Bar entries A new setting keyboard.touchbar.ignored can selectively remove VS Code commands from the macOS Touch Bar. VS Code adds the following commands by default: workbench.action.navigateBack workbench.action.navigateForward workbench.action.debug.start workbench.action.debug.run workbench.action.debug.continue workbench.action.debug.pause workbench.action.debug.stepOver workbench.action.debug.stepInto workbench.action.debug.stepOut workbench.action.debug.restart workbench.action.debug.stop New editor group context keys There are two new when clause contexts for conditionally binding keyboard shortcuts: activeEditorGroupIndex - A number starting from 1 reflecting the position of an editor group in the editor grid. The group with index 1 will be the first in the top-left corner. activeEditorGroupLast - Will be true for the last editor group in the editor grid. Note: See when clause contexts reference for a full list of when clause contexts. Accessibility improvements We continue to fix accessibility issues in this milestone. Highlights are: Word navigation now follows what NVDA and VoiceOver expect. Words are properly announced when navigating using word navigation in the editor. The Windows Magnifier Tool can now follow the cursor in the editor. Screencast mode There have been several improvements to the Screencast mode ( Developer: Toggle Screencast Mode ): There's now a limit on the length of the screencast keybinding label. The keybinding label vertical position can be adjusted via the screencastMode.verticalOffset setting. The keybinding label can be configured to render only actual keyboard shortcuts via the screencastMode.onlyKeyboardShortcuts setting. The keyboard shortcuts render style was improved. Editor Cursor surrounding lines (scrollOff) You can now customize the number of visible lines to display around the cursor when moving the cursor towards the beginning or end of a file by setting editor.cursorSurroundingLines . In the Vim editor, this feature is called scrollOff . Multi-line search in Find The editor Find control now supports multiple line text search and replace. By pressing Ctrl+Enter , you can insert new lines into the input box. Copy and revert in the inline diff editor There are new actions for copying or reverting deleted content when using the inline diff editor. Hover on deleted content in the inline diff editor and you can now: Copy the whole deleted content Copy a specific line Revert the change Go to Line supports negative line numbers You can now type in negative line numbers to the Go to Line picker to navigate from the end of the file. For example, typing -1 will reveal the last line of the file. Global search minimap decorations The minimap (code overview) now shows search results for searches both within a file and global search. Integrated Terminal Improved fallback behavior when using variables in terminal.integrated.cwd When using variables in the cwd setting such as: "terminal.integrated.cwd" : "${fileDirname}" instead of throwing an error when a variable cannot be resolved, the terminal will now log an error to the console and fallback to the workspace directory. Automation shell setting In addition to setting the shell for the Integrated Terminal, you can now specify a shell for automation (such as Tasks). This is particularly useful if you use tmux as your shell since that doesn't work with all automation. "terminal.integrated.shell.osx" : "/Users/user/bin/tmux_script" "terminal.integrated.automationShell.osx" : "bash" , Languages MDN Reference for HTML and CSS VS Code now displays a URL pointing to the relevant MDN Reference in completion and hover of HTML & CSS entities: We thank the MDN documentation team for their effort in curating mdn-data / mdn-browser-compat-data and making MDN resources easily accessible by VS Code. Improved Less support VS Code now supports many new Less.js features including root functions, map lookups and anonymous mixins. Deprecation mark for nonstandard and obsolete CSS properties The CSS language server adopts the Deprecation Tag experimental API and shows a deprecation mark for CSS properties marked as nonstandard or obsolete in auto completion. TypeScript 3.6 VS Code now ships with TypeScript 3.6.2. This major update brings some TypeScript language improvements—including stricter generators and support for import.meta , as well as some new tooling features for both JavaScript and TypeScript. As always, this release also includes a number of important bug fixes. You can read more about the TypeScript 3.6 features on the TS 3.6 blog post . Add missing await Quick Fix Is your code getting a little ahead of itself? The new Add 'await' Quick Fix helps you await values that you may have overlooked in asynchronous code: This Quick Fix is available in TypeScript and JavaScript source code that has type checking enabled . Semicolon aware editing for JavaScript and TypeScript When you add an import or apply a refactoring in JavaScript or Typescript source code, VS Code now tries to infer whether or not to include semicolons from existing code in the file: You can find the details of how this semicolon detection works on the pull request that added this feature . Some Quick Fixes and refactorings as still not semicolon aware, but we will be working to address this in future updates. JSDoc comments no longer merge for IntelliSense Previously, our JavaScript and TypeScript IntelliSense would combine multiple JSDoc comments if they appeared before a definition. In the example below, notice how the documentation for the User type is merged with that of the getUser function: With TypeScript 3.6, our IntelliSense now only uses the immediately preceding JSDoc comment for documentation and typing information: Source Control Git: Branch name on commit input The current Git branch name now appears in the commit input box, to avoid committing on the wrong branch: Git: Sort branch list alphabetically There's a new git.branchSortOrder setting to change the order of branches when checking out to a branch with the Git: Checkout to... command. Git: Support pull cancellation When enabling the git.supportCancellation setting, you'll have the opportunity to cancel ongoing Git Pull requests, which is useful when pulling from slow remotes. Debugging Breaking when value changes (Data Breakpoints) From the Variables view, it is now possible to create data breakpoints that will get hit when the value of the underlying variable changes. Just like other breakpoints, data breakpoints can be disabled/enabled and removed in the Breakpoints view. Please note that data breakpoints require specific support by an underlying runtime or debugger, and we expect only a few debug extensions like C++ and C# (but not Node.js) to opt into this feature in the future. For this release, only our example debugger Mock Debug "mocks" data breakpoints. Call Stack view improvements We have done some improvements to the Call Stack view, most notably: When a debug session has just one thread, we will always hide the thread and show the call stack directly. Clicking on the threads and debug sessions in the Call Stack view no longer expands / collapses them. Only an explicit click on the twistie will do the expansion. The reason for this change is that it was tedious to change the focused session without doing some unwanted expansion. The same behavior can be seen in our Outline view. Previously when there was a new debug session, the Debug view would get focus. Now the Debug view gets focus only if a session actually breaks. Debug session elements only display a twistie when there are actually threads for that session. New shell setting for launching a debug target When launching a debug target in the Integrated Terminal, VS Code now respects the new "shell for automation" setting ( terminal.integrated.automationShell... ). This setting is useful if you use a specific default shell for the Integrated Terminal (for example, tmux) that does not work with automation, when launching a debug target. "terminal.integrated.shell.osx" : "/Users/user/bin/tmux_script" "terminal.integrated.automationShell.osx" : "bash" , Contributions to extensions Helping webview extensions add a Content Security Policy We've identified a number of extensions that create Webviews that don't have a Content Security Policy . While this does not present an immediate concern, all webview should have a content security policy as a good security best practice. This iteration, we've started to open issues against these extensions to make them aware of the recommendation. If you are interested in making some of the extensions you use everyday a bit more secure, take a look at VS Code issue #79340 and submit PRs to help them out. GitHub Pull Requests This milestone we continued working on improvements to the GitHub Pull Requests extension, including bug fixes and features like Delete branch and remote after merging a pull request . See our August Milestone plan for more details. Remote Development (Preview) Work has continued on the Remote Development extensions, which allow you to use a container, remote machine, or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. To help get you started with the Remote Development extensions, there are three introductory tutorials: Dev Containers - Run Visual Studio Code in a Docker Container. Remote via SSH - Connect to remote and virtual machines with Visual Studio Code via SSH. Working in WSL - Run Visual Studio Code in Windows Subsystem for Linux. You can also read a recent blog post describing Tips and Tricks for Linux development with WSL and Visual Studio Code . Feature highlights in 1.38 include: VS Code Stable preview support for Alpine Linux Containers, Alpine WSL distributions, and ARMv7l / AArch32 SSH hosts. VS Code Insiders experimental support for ARMv8l / AArch64 SSH hosts. Improvements to Dev Containers including a new container explorer! You can learn about new extension features and bug fixes in the Remote Development release notes . Extension authoring VS Code icon repository We've published a repository of all of the VS Code icons for use by extension authors. There are dark/light versions of each icon, and we also linked to our Figma design file . Webview.asWebviewUri and Webview.cspSource There are two new properties on webviews: Webview.asWebviewUri - Convert a URI for the local file system to one that can be used inside webviews. For desktop VS Code, this will convert file: URIs into vscode-resource: URIs. Webview.cspSource - The content security policy source for webview resources. For desktop VS Code, this would be the string vscode-resource: . const panel = vscode . window . createWebviewPanel ( CatCodingPanel . viewType , 'Cat Coding' , vscode . ViewColumn . One , { // Restrict the webview to only loading local content from our extension's `media` directory. localResourceRoots: [ vscode . Uri . file ( path . join ( extensionPath , 'media' ))] } ); const imagePath = vscode . Uri . file ( path . join ( extensionPath , 'media' )); panel . html = `<!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en"> <head> <meta charset="UTF-8"> <meta http-equiv="Content-Security-Policy" content="default-src 'none'; img-src ${ panel . webview . cspSource } https:;"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0"> <title>Cat Coding</title> </head> <body> <img src=" ${ panel . webview . asWebviewUri ( imagePath ) } /cat.gif" width="300" /> </body> </html>` ; Warning when creating webview without a Content Security Policy While developing an extension that uses the Webview API , we now log a warning when you create a webview that does not set a Content Security Policy . All webviews (even very simple ones) should set a content security policy. This helps limit the potential impact of content injections and is generally a good measure for defense in depth. We've documented how to add a content security policy to VS Code webviews in the Webview extension guide . Machine-specific overridable settings You can now define a machine specific setting that can be overridable at workspace and folder level using the scope machine-overridable . "configuration" : { "title" : "My Extension Settings" , "properties" : { "myextension.libPath" : { "type" : [ "string" , "null" ], "markdownDescription" : "Specify the path to the library." , "default" : null , "scope" : "machine-overridable" } } } Multi-select in custom tree view Trees contributed through createTreeView can now add the canSelectMany option to the TreeViewOptions<T> . This enables multi-select in the contributed tree view and causes commands that are run on tree elements to receive all the selected tree elements as an array in the second command argument. markdown.api.render The new markdown.api.render command from VS Code's built-in Markdown extension takes a string of Markdown or a vscode.TextDocument and returns the rendered Markdown as HTML: import * as vscode from 'vscode' ; export function activate ( context : vscode . ExtensionContext ) { vscode . commands . executeCommand ( 'markdown.api.render' , '# Hello Markdown' ). then ( result => { console . log ( `rendered markdown: ${ result } ` ); }); } Logs: rendered markdown: < h1 id = "hello-markdown" data-line = "0" class = "code-line" > Hello Markdown </ h1 > Custom Data marked as Stable The custom data format introduced as experimental feature in the January 2019 1.31 release is now marked as Stable. html.experimental.customData - This setting is deprecated and superseded by html.customData . css.experimental.customData - This setting is deprecated and superseded by css.customData . contributes.html.experimental.customData - This Contribution Point is deprecated and superseded by contributes.html.customData . contributes.css.experimental.customData - This Contribution Point is deprecated and superseded by contributes.css.customData . You can learn more about how to use the custom data format to enhance VS Code's HTML/CSS language support in the documentation and samples at microsoft/vscode-custom-data . Deprecated workspace.rootPath When we added support for multi-root workspaces, we deprecated the API workspace.rootPath in favor of workspace.workspaceFolders and workspace.getWorkspaceFolder . We have noticed that many extensions still use this API, even though it won't work properly in multi-root workspaces. If you own an extension that uses this API, please update it as we may want to get rid of this API in the future. You can find more details about moving away from rootPath on the Adopting-Multi-Root-Workspace-APIs wiki page . Debug Adapter Protocol Improvements for completion proposals A debug adapter can now use the new capability completionTriggerCharacters for announcing the characters that a frontend UI should use to trigger the completion proposals UI in a REPL or debug console. If none is specified, the frontend UI should use the '.' character to trigger the proposal UI. In addition, we've added an optional sortText attribute to the CompletionItem type. With this attribute, a debug adapter can control how the frontend UI sorts the completion proposals returned by the adapter. If the attribute is missing, the frontend may sort items based on the label attribute. Fixed a type issue in DAP's JSON schema In the Debug Adapter Protocol JSON schema , we've changed the use of the type specifier number to integer in those places where a float type makes no sense, for example for IDs. Proposed extension APIs Every milestone comes with new proposed APIs and extension authors can try them out. As always we are keen on your feedback. This is what you have to do to try out a proposed API: You must use Insiders because proposed APIs change frequently. You must have this line in the package.json file of your extension: "enableProposedApi": true . Copy the latest version of the vscode.proposed.d.ts file into your project. Note that you cannot publish an extension that uses a proposed API. We may likely make breaking changes in the next release and we never want to break existing extensions. Deprecation tags for symbols and completions The API for completions and document/workspace symbols now supports marking items as deprecated. Completions and symbols have a new, optional property tags that is a set of CompletionItemTag s or SymbolTag s. Today, only deprecation is supported but there are plans to add more tags, for example tags for access modifiers and other modifiers. The snippet below shows a minimal completion item provider that renders an item that's marked as deprecated. vscode . languages . registerCompletionItemProvider ( 'plaintext' , { provideCompletionItems () { const item = new vscode . CompletionItem ( 'deprecated_completion' ); item . tags = [ vscode . CompletionItemTag . Deprecated ]; return [ item ]; } }); When showing deprecated completions or symbols a strikeout is rendered across the names, items are slightly dimmed, and highlights aren't shown: Pseudoterminal.onDidClose now accepts a number The proposed Pseudoterminal.onDidClose has changed from an Event<void> to an Event<void | number> , allowing extension authors to indicate that the terminal or CustomExecution2 task failed. Deprecated proposed terminal APIs removed The deprecated TerminalOptions.runInBackground and createTerminalRenderer APIs have been removed. If you need to migrate off of these, you should use TerminalOptions.hideFromUser (stable) and ExtensionTerminalOptions (proposed) respectively. New Commands We now expose commands for navigating through search results in the Find control from the Editor, Integrated Terminal, Extension Details view, and Webviews. Key Command Command ID Enter Find Next Result in Editor editor.action.nextMatchFindAction ⇧Enter (Windows, Linux Shift+Enter ) Find Previous Result in Editor editor.action.previousMatchFindAction ⇧Enter (Windows, Linux Shift+Enter ) Find Next Result in Integrated Terminal workbench.action.terminal.findNext Enter Find Previous Result in Integrated Terminal workbench.action.terminal.findPrevious Enter Find Next Result in Extension Details View editor.action.extensioneditor.findNext ⇧Enter (Windows, Linux Shift+Enter ) Find Previous Result in Extension Details View editor.action.extensioneditor.findPrevious Enter Find Next Result in Webview editor.action.webvieweditor.findNext ⇧Enter (Windows, Linux Shift+Enter ) Find Previous Result in Webview editor.action.webvieweditor.findPrevious Notable fixes 26012 : Automatic insertion of parens doesn't interact nicely with completions, results in duplicated characters 47292 : Diagnostics created by tasks aren't accessible to extensions 73884 : Linux: opening files from FTP connection show up empty 75054 : macOS simple fullscreen is working again 77293 : Respect the CancelationToken in provideDebugConfigurations and resolveDebugConfigurations to cancel debugging 77735 : workspace.applyEdit drops the TextEdit if there is a RenameFile later 77747 : file name with $(xx) displayed incorrectly in folder view 77990 : Starting with a TS/JS file is significantly file slower than opening other files 77996 : File > Save As moves cursor to beginning of file 78147 : Configure task action should reveal the newly added task and position the cursor there 78179 : Invoking 'tasks.fetchTask()' with a type filter fetches all tasks 79478 : Highlight custom html tags in markdown files 79704 : Support @example <caption> in JSDoc 79763 : Editors: can close all editors, even if dirty 79798 : Editors: group not activated with workbench.editor.revealIfOpen: true 78046 : SCM: Support staging selected changes for new files too, thanks to Darrien Singleton (@OneThatWalks) from PR #78562 79625 : Provide code completion for the "preLaunchTask" structure Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You! to the following folks that helped to make VS Code even better: Contributions to vscode : Andy Hinkle (@ahinkle) : Check for updates only once at launch PR #72169 Aidan Dang (@AidanGG) : Fix trivial zsh completion typo PR #79420 Anton Kosyakov (@akosyakov) : [monaco] expose missing language providers PR #78955 Andrew Casey (@amcasey) : Strip a path list out of an error message PR #78991 Aminadav Glickshtein (@Aminadav) : Fix typo in tasks jsonSchema PR #79803 Russell Kennington (@arussellk) : Fix #72587 suggestWidget no scroll on first open PR #73625 Arash Arbabi (@ATheCoder) : This fixes #78170 PR #78327 Patrick Burke (@burknator) : Show head label in placeholder of commit message PR #75295 Chris May (@chrismay) : #56286 Add a configuration option to show/hide icons in the breadcrumbs view PR #78879 Connor Peet (@connor4312) : feat(markdown): add render command (fixes #75612) PR #77151 Christopher Strack (@csk-ableton) : Normalize paths when matching problems PR #77875 Dan McCarthy (@Daniel-McCarthy) : Updated git branch tooltip to display full branch name instead of "checkout..." PR #72275 DiamondYuan (@DiamondYuan) storage - refactor: GlobalStorageDatabaseChannel should dependents in IStorageMainService PR #79387 [wip]feat: support list.focusParent command PR #77848 docs: fix typo restablished -> reestablished PR #79129 Carson McManus (@dyc3) : Fix #68849 "Screencast: Some keys do not get special treatment" PR #69904 Phil Marshall (@flurmbo) Hide screencast overflow PR #68048 Git prompt save only on staged PR #67953 Gabriel DeBacker (@GabeDeBacker) : Fix issue with CustomExecutions not working through tasks.executeTask PR #79132 John Murray (@gjsjohnmurray) Fix #79047 - Wasted stat call on workspace root PR #79052 Fix #79240 - Duplicated '(read-only)' suffix on titlebar name PR #79241 Hung-Wei Hung (@hwhung0111) : Feat. #77878 - trim git clone PR #78504 Andrew Liu (@hypercubestart) fix #78465 Markdown Preview scroll remains same after clicking on some other… PR #79416 fix for 79704 - support for @example PR #79846 Martin Jähn (@infmja) : Fix middle mouse button opening broken release notes link in browser PR #76487 Yunlei Liu (@ipmsteven) : Add only tracked files can be auto staged flag [Fix #70091] PR #70539 Itamar (@itamark) : cancel hide if still hovered - solves #77490 PR #78377 Jarnin Fang (@JarninFang) : Issue 78480: Clear Filter command link includes dot PR #78982 Jean Pierre (@jeanp413) Make centerEditorLayout do not call layout PR #77743 Ignore double click on twistie PR #78922 Don't auto expand if it's root in indexTreeModel PR #79542 Force refresh on setInput in settingEditor PR #78933 Jon Bockhorst (@jmbockhorst) : Use DOM scrollbar in SCM commit message box PR #72171 João Ricardo Reis (@joaorreis13) : Git: Support sync cancellation #59047 Issue Fix PR #65212 Josh Leeb-du Toit (@joshleeb) : Add option to hide git sync button in status bar PR #70536 Kamran Ayub (@kamranayub) : Strikeout deprecated CompletionItems PR #78092 Leonardo Rochael Almeida (@leorochael) : Toggle for disabling autofocus on debugger stop PR #77213 Jiaxun Wei (@LeuisKen) : fix: keep the two "Copy Path" behavior consistent PR #79294 Marcus Noble (@MarcusNoble) : Add setting to make touchbar controls optional PR #70174 @marmikc : Fix Microsoft #71258 - Cannot undo empty commits PR #72699 Matthew Kwiecien (@mattkwiecien) : Allowing a user to change screencast mode overlay position and height/width from settings. PR #69314 @mayaswrath : Issues/77879 PR #79065 Max Belsky (@mbelsky) Use const instead of let PR #79770 Polish breadcrumbs icons spacing PR #79160 Mickael Istria (@mickaelistria) : Issue #79599 - CSS LS fails if InitializationOptions.dataPaths not set PR #79600 Mikhail Zaretski (@mIkhail-zaretsky) : 'suggestSmartCommit' configuration setting was introduced PR #63743 @mkenigs Add setting to only display control characters PR #69296 set screencast to display 15 characters PR #67625 N.Z (@neesonqk) : Fixes #69240 PR #69506 Micah Smith (@Olovan) : Fix #72640 PR #75213 Darrien Singleton (@OneThatWalks) Support staging for new files PR #78562 Git clone fix to use basename PR #61112 @qadram : #10027 confirmSave should check the goal of running an extension is a… PR #78033 Mariana Costa (@Quendrique) : Git sync now publishes branch upon confirmation (#_64183 issue fix) PR #65247 Will Bender (@Ragnoroct) : Ignore empty string arg PR #61957 Rich Evans (@rcbevans) Try resolve git branches beginning with '@' before replacing with symbolic full path PR #66097 Git discard changes fails for large changesets with "ENAMETOOLONG" Fix for #65693 PR #66095 Prabhanjan S Koushik (@skprabhanjan) Fix-79525 New pattern to Preserve Case ( hyphen separated variables) PR #79528 Fix-78397 Implement case preservation in search as well PR #79111 Fix #64077 - Allow to sort branches alphabetically PR #78695 Fix-78915 Webview not handing CustomEvent PR #79523 Jonathan Mannancheril (@SneakyFish5) Add CURRENT_SECONDS_UNIX snippet variable PR #79099 Allow goToLine to work backwards PR #79348 Tony Xia (@tony-xia) : Fixed minor typos PR #78042 Salvador Cabrera Lozano (@txava) : Fix for #78465: Markdown Preview scroll remains same after clicking on some othe… PR #79450 Alexander (@usernamehw) [Screencast] Add border for keys PR #67641 [Screencast] Smooth showing/hiding of marker PR #67823 Utkarsh Gupta (@UtkarshGupta-CS) : fix: event's jsdoc typo PR #79071 Dan Wood (@valtism) : Clean user input for git clone extension PR #65906 Vitaliy Mazurenko (@vitaliymaz) : fix commit template message whitespace removing #71312 PR #71710 Yisrael Veller (@YisraelV) Make toggle-explain a SuggestCommand PR #78351 if there is no documentation don't show border PR #62584 Reuse never show again logic - work in progress PR #73968 Yuya Tanaka (@ypresto) : Let executeCodeActionProvider pass-through Selection object PR #77999 Contributions to our issue tracking: John Murray (@gjsjohnmurray) Andrii Dieiev (@IllusionMH) Alexander (@usernamehw) kanlukasz (@kanlukasz) ArturoDent (@ArturoDent) Please see our Community Issue Tracking page, if you want to help us manage incoming issues. Contributions to vscode-css-languageservice : Benny Powers (@bennypowers) : Update mdn-data dependency PR #170 Ben Scott (@BPScott) : Improve scss partial uri building PR #159 Brett Jurgens (@brettjurgens) : Enable strict compiler setting PR #167 Matthew Dean (@matthew-dean) : Support for Less root functions, lookups, anonymous mixins PR #135 Contributions to vscode-html-languageservice : Tony Xia (@tony-xia) : Use 'const' rather than 'var' PR #66 Contributions to vscode-eslint : @salvofid : fix https://github.com/microsoft/vscode-eslint/issues/682 PR #698 Contributions to language-server-protocol : Nurbol Alpysbayev (@anurbol) : Typo in contributing.md PR #798 Contributions to debug-adapter-protocol : KamasamaK (@KamasamaK) : Fix spelling PR #70 Contributions to vscode-loader : Samuel Bronson (@SamB) : Normalize line endings PR #24 Contributions to vscode-recipes : Jamie Haywood (@jamiehaywood) : Updating the README to reflect the code. PR #224 Michał Wojciechowski (@odyniec) : Fix typos in debugging-Ruby-on-Rails/README PR #223 Contributions to localization : There are over 800 Cloud + AI Localization community members using the Microsoft Localization Community Platform (MLCP), with over about 100 active contributors to Visual Studio Code. We appreciate your contributions, either by providing new translations, voting on translations, or suggesting process improvements. Here is a snapshot of contributors . For details about the project including the contributor name list, visit the project site at https://aka.ms/vscodeloc . Bosnian: Ismar Bašanović, Ernad Husremovic. Bulgarian: Hristiqn Hristov, Иван Иванов, Любомир Василев, Gheorghi Penkov. Czech: Tadeáš Cvrček, Daniel Padrta, David Jareš, Jan Hajek, Jakub Stibůrek, Michal Franc, Jan Kos, Radim Hampl, Jiří Hofman, Samuel Tulach, Jan Brudný. Danish: René Pape, Lasse Stilvang, Allan Kimmer Jensen, Lars Vange Jørgensen, Alexander Matzen, Martin Liversage, Johan Fagerberg, Thomas Larsen, Anders Lund, Anton Ariens. Dutch: Leroy Witteveen, Laurens Kwanten, Pieterjan De Clippel, Maxim Janssens, Luc Sieben, Hans Zoons, Jos Verlinde, Eric Algera, Damien van Gageldonk, Maxim Van Damme, Sven Klaasen, Tom Meulemans, Sujith Quintelier. English (United Kingdom): Martin Littlecott, Alexander Ogilvie, Tobias Collier, William Wood, Cloud Sky, Fabio Zuin, Mohit Nain, sonali Dixit, Dan Jacobs, Giorgi Jambazishvili, Sulkhan Ninidze, alshyab wa3ed, YASHU MITTAL, Tejas kale, Mohammad Idrees, Chris Dias. Finnish: Petri Niinimäki, Kiti Suupohja, Lasse Leppänen, Sebastian de Mel, Riku Riikonen, Valtteri Vatanen. French: Griffard, Thierry DEMAN-BARCELÒ, Corwin D'Ambre, Mohamed Sahbi, Rodolphe NOEL, Maxime Coquerel, Steven Dugois, Cédric M., Michael VAUDIN, Bastien Boussouf, Alicia lic, francois-joseph du fou, franto, DJ Dakta. German: Julian Pritzi, Joscha Mathis, Jan Widmer, Jakob von der Haar, Frank Lindecke, Dejan Dinic, Florian Erbs, Patrick Burke, Mario Koschischek, Florian Berger, Christof Opresnik, Hans Meiser, Carsten Kneip, Ettore Atalan, Thorsten Hans, Meghana Garise, Sebastian Seidl. Greek: Δημήτρης Παπαϊωάννου, Sotiris Koukios-Panopoulos, Jim Spentzos, Θοδωρής Τσιρπάνης, Stratos Kourtzanidis, Charalampos Fanoulis, John D, Stavros Papadakis, Vassilis Vouvonikos. Hebrew: חיים לבוב, Shalom Craimer, Matan Amos, Eyal Ellenbogen, Snir Broshi, Kyle Orin. Hindi: Satish Yadav, Amit Gusain, Sanyam Jain, Abhirav Kushwaha, Ashok Kumar Rathore, nirav adatiya, Rajeev Desai, shaswat rungta, Kumar Vaibhav, Pramit Das, Jagjeet Singh, Pratishek PII, Kiren Paul, Chethana S, Piyush Sonagara, KRISHNA TANDON, Kishan K, Dhanvi Kapila. Hungarian: Levente Borbély, Péter Nagy, Alex Kiss, Levente Hallai Seiler, Dániel Tar, Richard Borcsik, Boldi Kemény. Chinese Simplified: Tingting Yi, 斌 项, paul cheung, 建东 薛, Yiting Zhu, feiyun0112 feiyun0112, Justin Liu, Yizhi Gu, Joel Yang, 刘瑞恒 刘瑞恒, Edi Wang, Junzhe Liu, Dave Young, 张锐, Fan Su, 昊宇 周, Pluwen, Tony Xia, Yu Zhang, XIANG ZUO, 少民 谈, 彦佐 刘, Zhiqiang Li, 志乐 龚, 福永 叶, G.Y. Z, Hao Hu, meng shao, Horie Yuan, Xiangrui Kong, 王文杰, Liam Kennedy, 赵畅畅, Charles Lee, 松阳 樊, anson zhang, Young Bige, Shi Liu, Wang Debang, Jarvis Jiang, Lin ai, Jessica Zhang, Licheng Ren, , 驰 雷, sun qing, xiong Fu, Lynne Dong, zhao yu, 吉姆 舒, 红东 黄, 剑秋 陶, 游 尤, Hanlin Yang, bh wu, Bravo Yeung, Michael Zhang, Hanyu ZHANG, Y F, WangCG duoduobear, 越 郑, ziqiang sun, 正元 刘, Jiang LI, 擎 钟, peng wei, 涛 徐, 逍遥 许, 瑜 周, WL, 伟 全, rsy iridescent, Simon Chan, 海龙 黄, 仁松 陈, Jieting Xu, panda small, 翼 张, Chen Yang, Wang Weixuan, Ludi Fang, 舜杰 杨, 建 周, cuibty wong, 立飞 李, 雨齐 刘, 涛 罗, 九鼎 谭, LI ZHAO. Chinese Traditional: 謝政廷, Yi-Jyun Pan, Winnie Lin, LikKee 沥祺 Richie, Martin Lau, salagadoola _, 牧村 蔡, Jeremy, 小克, 煾 雪. Indonesian: Jakka Prihatna, Septian Adi, Arif Fahmi, Laurensius Dede Suhardiman, Bakhtiar Amaludin, Heston Sinuraya, Riwut Libinuko, Hendra Widjaja , Rachmat Wahidi, Franky So, Bervianto Leo Pratama, Eriawan Kusumawardhono, Rifani Arsyad, Afnizar Nur Ghifari, Pradipta Hendri, Christian Elbrianno, Azhe Kun. Italian: Alessandro Alpi, Bruni Luca, Luigi Bruno, Andrea Dottor, Riccardo Cappello, Moreno Bruschi, Aldo Donetti, andrea falco, Emanuele Meazzo, Michael Longo, Marco Dal Pino. Japanese: EbXpJ6bp -, nh, Kyohei Uchida, Takayuki Fuwa, Yoshihisa Ozaki, Hasefumi, TENMYO Masakazu, Michihito Kumamoto, Koichi Makino, Aya Tokura, Seiji Momoto, Yosuke Sano, Makoto Sakaguchi, Kyohei Moriyama, 裕子 知念, Rie Moriguchi, Fujio Kojima, 美穂 山本, taniokae, 太郎 西岡, Kazuya Ujihara, Hiroomi Kurosawa, Yasuaki Matsuda. Korean: Hongju, 우현 조, Jong Heun Shin, 형섭 이, Kyunghee Ko, Youngjae Kim, siin lee, Jae Yong Kum, Hoyeon Han, Kevin Lee, SeungJin Jeong, Hong Kwon. Latvian: Kaspars Bergs, Andris Vilde. Lithuanian: Andrius Svylas, Augustas Grikšas, Tautvydas Derzinskas, Karolis Kundrotas, Martynas J.. Norwegian: Andreas Rødland, Cookius Monsterius, Dag H. Baardsen, Ole Kristian Losvik, Stephan Eriksen, Agnethe Seim Olsen. Polish: Warchlak, Wojciech Maj, Marcin Weksznejder, Rafał Całka, Tomasz Świstak, Tomasz Wiśniewski, Marek Biedrzycki, Szymon Seliga, Michal Szulc, Jakub Żmidziński, Bartek PL, Igor 05, Rafał Wolak, Tomasz Chojnacki, Piotr Grędowski, Czech Kaczmarek, Artur Pelczar, Marcin Floryan, Paweł Modrzejewski, Jakub Jedryszek, Michał Stojke, Artur Zdanowski. Portuguese (Brazil): Marcondes Alexandre, Alessandro Trovato, Marcelo Fernandes, Roberto Fonseca, Albert Tanure, Judson Santiago, Junior Galvão - MVP, Ray Carneiro, Lucas Miranda, Rodrigo Crespi, Thiago Dupin Ugeda, Renan Miguel, Weslei A. de T. Marinho, Rafael Lima Teixeira, Eduardo Moura, Gerardo Magela Machado da Silva, Bruno Talanski, Bruno Sonnino, Loiane Groner, Marcos Albuquerque, Jucinei Pereira dos Santos, Emmanuel Gomes Brandão, Fábio Corrêa, Flávio Albuquerque Camilo, Pablo Garcia, Alessandro Fragnani, Andrei Bosco, Daniel Luna, José Rafael de Santana, Douglas Ivatiuk Martim, Giuliano Reginatto, Marcos Dias, Alan William, Lucas Nunes, Gabriel Schade, Lucas Santos, arthurdenner ., Mauricio Lima, Igor Felix, Gabriel Barbosa, Fabio Lux, Guilherme Pais, Victor Cavalcante, Letticia Nicoli, Becky Marques, Fernando Val, Milton Camara, Saymon Damásio, Felipe Scuissiatto, Rodrigo Vieira, Djonathas Cardoso, André Gama, Gustavo Bezerra, Cynthia Zanoni, Marcelo Guerra, Jhonathan Soares, Rafael Laranja, Swellington Soares. Portuguese(Portugal): Ana Rebelo, Nuno Carapito, Pedro Daniel, Pedro Teixeira, João Carvalho, Diogo Barros, José Rodrigues, Sandro Pereira, Vitor Barbosa, Tiago Antunes, Daniel Correia. Romanian: Mihai Marinescu, Stefan Gabos, Dragos Marinescu, Alexandru Staicu. Russian: Andrey Veselov, Дмитрий Кирьянов, netf0rger, michael v, Иван Лещенко, nata kazakova, Анатолий Калужин, Валерий Батурин, Эдуард Тихонов. Serbian: Milos Zivkovic, Radovan Skendzic. Spanish: Andy Gonzalez, Ricardo Estrada Rdez, Carlos Mendible, Alvaro Enrique Ruano, Engel Aguilar, José María Aguilar, David Fernández Aldana, Ricardo Rubio, Thierry DEMAN, Gabriel Perez, julian3xl, Adolfo Jayme, Ing. Sergio Uziel Tovar Lemus, Mario Mendieta, Jorge Serrano Pérez. Swedish: Johan Spånberg, Notetur Nomen. Tamil: Kondasamy Jayaraman, Merbin J Anselm, Jeyanthinath Muthuram, Mani M, Boopesh Kumar, Vignesh Rajendran, Jaganathan B, Nithun Harikrishnan, Purusothaman Ramanujam, கருணாகரன் சமயன், Krishna Pravin, Jeffin R P, Sakthi Raj, Vetri ., Ranjith kumar. Turkish: mehmetcan Gün, Meryem Aytek, Fıratcan Sucu, Anıl Mısırlıoğlu, Mehmet Yönügül, Ahmetcan Aksu, Ömer Sert, Sinan Açar, Misir Jafarov, Umut Can Alparslan, Yakup Ad, Hüseyin Fahri Uzun, Murat Pala, S. Ferit Arslan, Mesut Pişkin, Okan Çetin, Bruh Moment, Muhammed Emin TİFTİKÇİ, Burak Göksel. Ukrainian: Dmytro Kutianskyi, Yaroslav, Max Harasym, Arthur Murauskas, Sviatoslav Ivaskiv, George Molchanyuk, Did Kokos, Alexander Varchenko, Вадим Шашков, Евгений Коростылёв. Vietnamese: Khôi Phạm, Van-Tien Hoang, Việt Anh Nguyễn, Belikhun, Spepirus Shouru, Vuong Bui, Chủ Tất, Poon Nguyễn. On this page there are 13 sections On this page Workbench Editor Integrated Terminal Languages Source Control Debugging Contributions to extensions Extension authoring Debug Adapter Protocol Proposed extension APIs New Commands Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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Right menu **Unlocking Model Efficiency with the Pareto Principle** In Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 22 '25 **Unlocking Model Efficiency with the Pareto Principle** In # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Unlocking the Power of Federated Learning: SCAFFOLD vs Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 22 '25 **Unlocking the Power of Federated Learning: SCAFFOLD vs # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming Comments Add Comment 1 min read **The Rise of Adaptive Federated Learning: Revolutionizing A Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Oct 4 '25 **The Rise of Adaptive Federated Learning: Revolutionizing A # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read AI Comedy: A New Era of Hilarious Content Sebastian Reid Sebastian Reid Sebastian Reid Follow Sep 22 '25 AI Comedy: A New Era of Hilarious Content # ai # creativity # technology # art 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 13 min read The Techie and The Clown: Balancing Logic and Creativity for Real Innovation in Technology Leadership Yaseen Yaseen Yaseen Follow Oct 23 '25 The Techie and The Clown: Balancing Logic and Creativity for Real Innovation in Technology Leadership # technology # innovation # leadership # creativity 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 3 min read Tired of Writing the Same Email Over and Over? 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Let's Talk About AI Magic! # technology # programming # ai Comments Add Comment 3 min read **Unlocking the World of Artificial Intelligence: Agents and Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 **Unlocking the World of Artificial Intelligence: Agents and # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 2 reactions Comments Add Comment 1 min read The future of AI is rapidly shifting towards a new paradigm Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 The future of AI is rapidly shifting towards a new paradigm # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 2 reactions Comments Add Comment 1 min read **The Rise of Contextual Fluidity in Prompt Engineering: Rev Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 **The Rise of Contextual Fluidity in Prompt Engineering: Rev # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read **The Myth-Busting Reality of MLOps: Data Quality and Prepro Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 **The Myth-Busting Reality of MLOps: Data Quality and Prepro # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Unlocking the Power of Personalized TV Show Recommendation Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 **Unlocking the Power of Personalized TV Show Recommendation # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Unlocking the Power of Reinforcement Learning: Discovering Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 **Unlocking the Power of Reinforcement Learning: Discovering # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Boosting Cybersecurity Effectiveness with AI: The Power of Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 **Boosting Cybersecurity Effectiveness with AI: The Power of # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Rethinking MLOps: Why Explainability Trumps Accuracy** In Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 **Rethinking MLOps: Why Explainability Trumps Accuracy** In # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read 💡 For ML practitioners: when exploring QML, don't overlook t Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 💡 For ML practitioners: when exploring QML, don't overlook t # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Unlock the Power of ReAgent: Revolutionizing Reinforcement Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 **Unlock the Power of ReAgent: Revolutionizing Reinforcement # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Boosting Cybersecurity with Transfer Learning and Pre-Trai Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 **Boosting Cybersecurity with Transfer Learning and Pre-Trai # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read The convergence of AI and spatial audio technologies is pois Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 The convergence of AI and spatial audio technologies is pois # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Anomaly Detection VS Predictive AI in Cybersecurity: The D Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 **Anomaly Detection VS Predictive AI in Cybersecurity: The D # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read 🧩 Federated Learning Challenge: "Distributed Data Augmentati Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 🧩 Federated Learning Challenge: "Distributed Data Augmentati # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Building an Emotional State Detection AI Agent: A Simplifi Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 24 '25 **Building an Emotional State Detection AI Agent: A Simplifi # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read Success Story: Charles Tyler's Learning Journey with 101 Blockchains - 101 Blockchains #961877 calgo calgo calgo Follow Sep 20 '25 Success Story: Charles Tyler's Learning Journey with 101 Blockchains - 101 Blockchains #961877 # blockchain # fintech # crypto # technology Comments Add Comment 4 min read Is Your Fridge About to Order Your Groceries? 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https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_99 | March 2025 (version 1.99) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. 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Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the March 2025 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Agent mode Agent mode is available in VS Code Stable. Enable it by setting chat.agent.enabled ( more... ). Extend agent mode with Model Context Protocol (MCP) server tools ( more... ). Try the new built-in tools in agent mode for fetching web content, finding symbol references, and deep thinking ( more... ). Code editing Next Edit Suggestions is now generally available ( more... ). Benefit from fewer distractions such as diagnostics events while AI edits are applied in the editor ( more... ). Chat Use your own API keys to access more language models in chat (preview) ( more... ). Easily switch between ask, edit, and agent mode from the unified chat experience ( more... ). Experience improved workspace search speed and accuracy with instant remote workspace indexing ( more... ). Notebook editing Create and edit notebooks as easily as code files with support for edit and agent mode ( more... ). If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Chat Agent mode is available in VS Code Stable Setting : chat.agent.enabled We're happy to announce that agent mode is available in VS Code Stable! Enable it by setting chat.agent.enabled . If you do not see the setting, make sure to reload VS Code. Enabling the setting will no longer be needed in the following weeks, as we roll out enablement by default to all users. Check out the agent mode documentation or select agent mode from the chat mode picker in the Chat view. Model Context Protocol server support This release supports Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers in agent mode. MCP offers a standardized method for AI models to discover and interact with external tools, applications, and data sources. When you input a chat prompt using agent mode in VS Code, the model can invoke various tools to perform tasks such as file operations, accessing databases, or retrieving web data. This integration enables more dynamic and context-aware coding assistance. MCP servers can be configured under the mcp section in your user, remote, or .code-workspace settings, or in .vscode/mcp.json in your workspace. The configuration supports input variables to avoid hard-coding secrets and constants. For example, you can use ${env:API_KEY} to reference an environment variable or ${input:ENDPOINT} to prompt for a value when the server is started. You can use the MCP: Add Server command to quickly set up an MCP server from a command line invocation, or use an AI-assisted setup from an MCP server published to Docker, npm, or PyPI. When a new MCP server is added, a refresh action is shown in the Chat view, which can be used to start the server and discover the tools. Afterwards, servers are started on-demand to save resources. Theme: Codesong (preview on vscode.dev ) If you've already been using MCP servers in other applications such as Claude Desktop, VS Code will discover them and offer to run them for you. This behavior can be toggled with the setting chat.mcp.discovery.enabled . You can see the list of MCP servers and their current status using the MCP: List Servers command, and pick the tools available for use in chat by using the Select Tools button in agent mode. You can read more about how to install and use MCP servers in our documentation . Agent mode tools This milestone, we have added several new built-in tools to agent mode. Thinking tool (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.agent.thinkingTool . Inspired by Anthropic's research , we've added support for a thinking tool in agent mode that can be used to give any model the opportunity to think between tool calls. This improves our agent's performance on complex tasks in-product and on the SWE-bench eval. Fetch tool Use the #fetch tool for including content from a publicly accessible webpage in your prompt. For instance, if you wanted to include the latest documentation on a topic like MCP , you can ask to fetch the full documentation (which is conveniently ready for an LLM to consume) and use that in a prompt. Here's a video of what that might look like: In agent mode, this tool is picked up automatically but you can also reference it explicitly in the other modes via #fetch , along with the URL you are looking to fetch. This tool works by rendering the webpage in a headless browser window in which the data of that page is cached locally, so you can freely ask the model to fetch the contents over and over again without the overhead of re-rendering. Let us know how you use the #fetch tool, and what features you'd like to see from it! Fetch tool limitations: Currently, JavaScript is disabled in this browser window. The tool will not be able to acquire much context if the website depends entirely on JavaScript to render content. This is a limitation we are considering changing and likely will change to allow JavaScript. Due to the headless nature, we are unable to fetch pages that are behind authentication, as this headless browser exists in a different browser context than the browser you use. Instead, consider using MCP to bring in an MCP server that is purpose-built for that target, or a generic browser MCP server such as the Playwright MCP server . Usages tool The #usages tool is a combination of "Find All References", "Find Implementation", and "Go to Definition". This tool can help chat to learn more about a function, class, or interface. For instance, chat can use this tool to look for sample implementations of an interface or to find all places that need to be changed when making a refactoring. In agent mode this tool will be picked up automatically but you can also reference it explicitly via #usages Create a new workspace with agent mode (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.newWorkspaceCreation.enabled You can now scaffold a new VS Code workspace in agent mode . Whether you’re setting up a VS Code extension, an MCP server, or other development environments, agent mode helps you to initialize, configure, and launch these projects with the necessary dependencies and settings. VS Code extension tools in agent mode Several months ago, we finalized our extension API for language model tools contributed by VS Code extensions. Now, you can use these tools in agent mode. Any tool contributed to this API which sets toolReferenceName and canBeReferencedInPrompt in its configuration is automatically available in agent mode. By contributing a tool in an extension, it has access to the full VS Code extension APIs, and can be easily installed via the Extension Marketplace. Similar to tools from MCP servers, you can enable and disable these with the Select Tools button in agent mode. See our language model tools extension guide to build your own! Agent mode tool approvals As part of completing the tasks for a user prompt, agent mode can run tools and terminal commands. This is powerful but potentially comes with risks. Therefore, you need to approve the use of tools and terminal commands in agent mode. To optimize this experience, you can now remember that approval on a session, workspace, or application level. This is not currently enabled for the terminal tool, but we plan to develop an approval system for the terminal in future releases. In case you want to auto-approve all tools, you can now use the experimental chat.tools.autoApprove setting. This will auto-approve all tools, and VS Code will not ask for confirmation when a language model wishes to run tools. Bear in mind that with this setting enabled, you will not have the opportunity to cancel potentially destructive actions a model wants to take. We plan to expand this setting with more granular capabilities in the future. Agent evaluation on SWE-bench VS Code's agent achieves a pass rate of 56.0% on swebench-verified with Claude 3.7 Sonnet, following Anthropic's research on configuring agents to execute without user input in the SWE-bench environment. Our experiments have translated into shipping improved prompts, tool descriptions and tool design for agent mode, including new tools for file edits that are in-distribution for Claude 3.5 and 3.7 Sonnet models. Unified Chat view For the past several months, we've had a "Chat" view for asking questions to the language model, and a "Copilot Edits" view for an AI-powered code editing session. This month, we aim to streamline the chat-based experience by merging the two views into one Chat view. In the Chat view, you'll see a dropdown with three modes: Ask : This is the same as the previous Chat view. Ask questions about your workspace or coding in general, using any model. Use @ to invoke built-in chat participants or from installed extensions . Use # to attach any kind of context manually. Agent : Start an agentic coding flow with a set of tools that let it autonomously collect context, run terminal commands, or take other actions to complete a task. Agent mode is enabled for all VS Code Insiders users, and we are rolling it out to more and more users in VS Code Stable. Edit : In Edit mode, the model can make directed edits to multiple files. Attach #codebase to let it find the files to edit automatically. But it won't run terminal commands or do anything else automatically. Note : If you don't see agent mode in this list, then either it has not yet been enabled for you, or it's disabled by organization policy and needs to be enabled by the organization owner . Besides making your chat experience simpler, this unification enables a few new features for AI-powered code editing: Switch modes in the middle of a conversation : For example, you might start brainstorming an app idea in ask mode, then switch to agent mode to execute the plan. Tip: press to change modes quickly. Edit sessions in history : Use the Show Chats command (clock icon at the top of the Chat view) to restore past edit sessions and keep working on them. Move chat to editor or window : Select Open Chat in New Editor/New Window to pop out your chat conversation from the side bar into a new editor tab or separate VS Code window. Chat has supported this for a long time, but now you can run your edit/agent sessions from an editor pane or a separate window as well. Multiple agent sessions : Following from the above point, this means that you can even run multiple agent sessions at the same time. You might like to have one chat in agent mode working on implementing a feature, and another independent session for doing research and using other tools. Directing two agent sessions to edit files at the same time is not recommended, it can lead to confusion. Bring Your Own Key (BYOK) (Preview) Copilot Pro and Copilot Free users can now bring their own API keys for popular providers such as Azure, Anthropic, Gemini, Open AI, Ollama, and Open Router. This allows you to use new models that are not natively supported by Copilot the very first day that they're released. To try it, select Manage Models... from the model picker. We’re actively exploring support for Copilot Business and Enterprise customers and will share updates in future releases. To learn more about this feature, head over to our docs . Reusable prompt files Improved configuration Setting : chat.promptFilesLocations The chat.promptFilesLocations setting now supports glob patterns in file paths. For example, to include all .prompt.md files in the currently open workspace, you can set the path to { "**": true } . Additionally, the configuration now respects case sensitivity on filesystems where it applies, aligning with the behavior of the host operating system. Improved prompt file editing Your .prompt.md files now offer basic autocompletion for filesystem paths and highlight valid file references. Broken links on the other hand now appear as warning or error squiggles and provide detailed diagnostic information. You can now manage prompts using edit and delete actions in the prompt file list within the Chat: Use Prompt command. Folder references in prompt files are no longer flagged as invalid. Markdown comments are now properly handled, for instance, all commented-out links are ignored when generating the final prompt sent to the LLM model. Alignment with custom instructions The .github/copilot-instructions.md file now behaves like any other reusable .prompt.md file, with support for nested link resolution and enhanced language features. Furthermore, any .prompt.md file can now be referenced and is handled appropriately. Learn more about custom instructions . User prompts The Create User Prompt command now allows creating a new type of prompts called user prompts . These are stored in the user data folder and can be synchronized across machines, similar to code snippets or user settings. The synchronization can be configured in Sync Settings by using the Prompts item in the synchronization resources list. Improved vision support (Preview) Last iteration, Copilot Vision was enabled for GPT-4o . Check our release notes to learn more about how you can attach and use images in chat. This release, you can attach images from any browser via drag and drop. Images drag and dropped from browsers must have the correct url extension, with .jpg , .png , .gif , .webp , or .bmp . Configure the editor Unified chat experience We have streamlined the chat experience in VS Code into a single unified Chat view. Instead of having to move between separate views and lose the context of a conversation, you can now easily switch between the different chat modes. Depending on your scenario, use either of these modes, and freely move mid-conversation: Ask mode: optimized for asking questions about your codebase and brainstorming ideas. Edit mode: optimized for making edits across multiple files in your codebase. Agent mode: optimized for an autonomous coding flow, combining code edits and tool invocations. Get more details about the unified chat view . Faster workspace searches with instant indexing Remote workspace indexes accelerate searching large codebases for relevant code snippets that AI uses while answering questions and generating edits. These remote indexes are especially useful for large codebases with tens or even hundreds of thousands of files. Previously, you'd have to press a button or run a command to build and start using a remote workspace index. With our new instant indexing support, we now automatically build the remote workspace index when you first try to ask a #codebase / @workspace question. In most cases, this remote index can be built in a few seconds. Once built, any codebase searches that you or anyone else working with that repo in VS Code makes will automatically use the remote index. Keep in mind that remote workspaces indexes are currently only available for code stored on GitHub. To use a remote workspace index, make sure your workspace contains a git project with a GitHub remote. You can use the Copilot status menu to see the type of index currently being used: To manage load, we are slowly rolling out instant indexing over the next few weeks, so you may not see it right away. You can still run the GitHub Copilot: Build remote index command command to start using a remote index when instant indexing is not yet enabled for you. Copilot status menu The Copilot status menu, accessible from the Status Bar, is now enabled for all users. This milestone we added some new features to it: View workspace index status information at any time. View if code completions are enabled for the active editor. A new icon reflects the status, so that you can quickly see if code completions are enabled or not. Enable or disable code completions and NES . Out of the box Copilot setup (Experimental) Setting : chat.setupFromDialog We are shipping an experimental feature to show functional chat experiences out of the box. This includes the Chat view, editor/terminal inline chat, and quick chat. The first time you send a chat request, we will guide you through signing in and signing up for Copilot Free. If you want to see this experience for yourself, enable the chat.setupFromDialog setting. Chat prerelease channel mismatch If you have the prerelease version of the Copilot Chat extension installed in VS Code Stable, a new welcome screen will inform you that this configuration is not supported. Due to rapid development of chat features, the extension will not activate in VS Code Stable. The welcome screen provides options to either switch to the release version of the extension or download VS Code Insiders . Semantic text search improvements (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.search.semanticTextResults AI-powered semantic text search is now enabled by default in the Search view. Use the ⌘I (Windows, Linux Ctrl+I ) keyboard shortcut to trigger a semantic search, which shows you the most relevant results based on your query, on top of the regular search results. You can also reference the semantic search results in your chat prompt by using the #searchResults tool. This allows you to ask the LLM to summarize or explain the results, or even generate code based on them. Settings editor search updates By default, the Settings editor search now uses the key-matching algorithm we introduced in the previous release. It also shows additional settings even when the settings ID matches exactly with a known setting. Theme: Light Pink (preview on vscode.dev ) New setting for window controls (Linux, Windows) Setting : window.controlsStyle If you have set the title bar style ( window.titleBarStyle ) to custom , you can now choose between three different styles for the window controls. native : this is the default and renders window controls according to the underlying platform custom : renders window controls with custom styling if you prefer that over the native one hidden : hides window controls entirely if you want to gain some space in the title bar and are a more keyboard-centric user Code Editing Next Edit Suggestions general availability Setting : github.copilot.nextEditSuggestions.enabled We're happy to announce the general availability of Next Edit Suggestions (NES)! In addition, we've also made several improvements to the overall user experience of NES: Make edit suggestions more compact, less interfering with surrounding code, and easier to read at a glance. Updates to the gutter indicator to make sure that all suggestions are more easily noticeable. AI edits improvements We have done some smaller tweaks when generating edits with AI: Mute diagnostics events outside the editor while rewriting a file with AI edits. Previously, we already disabled squiggles in this scenario. These changes reduce flicker in the Problems panel and also ensure that we don't issue requests for the quick fix code actions. We now explicitly save a file when you decide to keep the AI edits. Tool-based edit mode Setting : chat.edits2.enabled We're making a change to the way edit mode in chat operates. The new edit mode uses the same approach as agent mode, where it lets the model call a tool to make edits to files. An upside to this alignment is that it enables you to switch seamlessly between all three modes, while providing a huge simplification to how these modes work under the hood. A downside is that this means that the new mode only works with the same reduced set of models that agent mode works with, namely models that support tool calling and have been tested to be sure that we can have a good experience when tools are involved. You may notice models like o3-mini and Claude 3.7 (Thinking) missing from the list in edit mode. If you'd like to keep using those models for editing, disable the chat.edits2.enabled setting to revert to the previous edit mode. You'll be asked to clear the session when switching modes. We've learned that prompting to get consistent results across different models is harder when using tools, but we are working on getting these models lit up for edit (and agent) modes. This setting will be enabled gradually for users in VS Code Stable. Inline suggestion syntax highlighting Setting : editor.inlineSuggest.syntaxHighlightingEnabled With this update, syntax highlighting for inline suggestions is now enabled by default. Notice in the following screenshot that the code suggestion has syntax coloring applied to it. If you prefer inline suggestions without syntax highlighting, you can disable it with editor.inlineSuggest.syntaxHighlightingEnabled . Tree-Sitter based syntax highlighting (Preview) Setting : editor.experimental.preferTreeSitter.css and editor.experimental.preferTreeSitter.regex Building upon the previous work for using Tree-Sitter for syntax highlighting, we now support experimental, Tree-Sitter based, syntax highlighting for CSS files and for regular expressions within TypeScript. Notebooks Minimal version of Jupyter notebook document to 4.5 The default version of nbformat for new notebooks has been bumped from 4.2 to 4.5, which will now set id fields for each cell of the notebook to help with calculating diffs. You can also manually update existing notebooks by setting the nbformat_minor to 5 in the raw JSON of the notebook. AI notebook editing improvements AI-powered editing support for notebooks (including agent mode) is now available in the Stable release. This was added last month as a preview feature in VS Code Insiders . You can now use chat to edit notebook files with the same intuitive experience as editing code files: modify content across multiple cells, insert and delete cells, and change cell types. This feature provides a seamless workflow when working with data science or documentation notebooks. New notebook tool VS Code now provides a dedicated tool for creating new Jupyter notebooks directly from chat. This tool plans and creates a new notebook based on your query. Use the new notebook tool in agent mode or edit mode (make sure to enable the improved edit mode with chat.edits2.enabled ). If you're using ask mode, type /newNotebook in the chat prompt to create a new notebook. Navigate through AI edits Use the diff toolbars to iterate through and review each AI edit across cells. Undo AI edits When focused on a cell container, the Undo command reverts the full set of AI changes at the notebook level. Text and image output support in chat You can now add notebook cell outputs, such as text, errors, and images, directly to chat as context. This lets you reference the output when using ask, edit, or agent mode, making it easier for the language model to understand and assist with your notebook content. Use the Add cell output to chat action, available via the triple-dot menu or by right-clicking the output. To attach the cell error output as chat context: To attach the cell output image as chat context: Accessibility Chat agent mode improvements You are now notified when manual action is required during a tool invocation, such as "Run command in terminal." This information is also included in the ARIA label for the relevant chat response, enhancing accessibility for screen reader users. Additionally, a new accessibility help dialog is available in agent mode , explaining what users can expect from the feature and how to navigate it effectively. Accessibility Signals for chat edit actions VS Code now provides auditory signals when you keep or undo AI-generated edits. These signals are configurable via accessibility.signals.editsKept and accessibility.signals.editsUndone . Improved ARIA labels for suggest control ARIA labels for suggest control items now include richer and descriptive information, such as the type of suggestion (for example, method or variable). This information was previously only available to sighted users via icons. Source Control Reference picker improvements Setting : git.showReferenceDetails This milestone, we have made improvements of the reference picker that is used for various source control operations like checkout, merge, rebase, or delete branch. The updated reference picker contains the details of the last commit (author, commit message, commit date), as well as ahead/behind information for local branches. This additional context will help you pick the right reference for the various operations. Hide the additional information by toggling the git.showReferenceDetails setting. Repository Status Bar item Workspaces that contain multiple repositories now have a Source Control Provider Status Bar item that displays the active repository to the left of the branch picker. The new Status Bar item provides additional context, so you know which is the active repository as you navigate between editors and use the Source Control view. To hide the Source Control Provider Status Bar item, right-click the Status Bar, and deselect Source Control Provider from the context menu. Git blame editor decoration improvements We have heard feedback that while typing, the "Not Yet Committed" editor decoration does not provide much value and it is more of a distraction. Starting this milestone the "Not Yet Committed" editor decoration is only shown while navigating around the codebase either by using the keyboard or the mouse. Commit input cursor customization This milestone, thanks to a community contribution, we have added the editor.cursorStyle and editor.cursorWidth settings to the list of settings that are being honored by the source control input box. Terminal Reliability in agent mode The tool that allows agent mode to run commands in the terminal has a number of reliability and compatibility improvements. You should expect fewer cases where the tool gets stuck or where the command finishes without the output being present. One of the bigger changes is the introduction of the concept of "rich" quality shell integration , as opposed to "basic" and "none". The shell integration scripts shipped with VS Code should generally all enable rich shell integration which provides the best experience in the run in terminal tool (and terminal usage in general). You can view the shell integration quality by hovering over the terminal tab. Terminal IntelliSense improvements (Preview) Enhanced IntelliSense for the code CLI IntelliSense now supports subcommands for the code , code-insiders , and code-tunnel CLI. For instance, typing code tunnel shows available subcommands like help , kill , and prune , each with descriptive info. We've also added option suggestions for: --uninstall-extension --disable-extension --install-extension These show a list of installed extensions to help complete the command. Additionally, code --locate-shell-integration-path now provides shell-specific options such as bash , zsh , fish , and pwsh . Auto-refresh for global commands The terminal now automatically refreshes its list of global commands when changes are detected in the system bin directory. This means newly installed CLI tools (for example, after running npm install -g pnpm ) will show up in completions immediately, without the need to reload the window. Previously, completions for new tools wouldn’t appear due to caching until the window was manually reloaded. Option value context Terminal suggestions now display contextual information about expected option values, helping you more easily complete commands. Rich completions for fish shell In the last release, we added detailed command completions for bash and zsh. This iteration, we've expanded that support to fish as well. Completion details are sourced from the shell’s documentation or built-in help commands. For example, typing jobs in fish displays usage info and options: File type icons in suggestions Suggestions in the terminal now include specific icons for different file types, making it easier to distinguish between scripts and binaries at a glance. Inline suggestion details Inline suggestions, displayed as ghost text in the terminal, continue to appear at the top of the suggestions list. In this release, we've added command details to these entries to provide more context before accepting them. New simplified and detailed tab hover By default, the terminal tab shows much less detail now. To view everything, there is a Show Details button at the bottom of the hover. Signed PowerShell shell integration The shell integration PowerShell script is now signed, meaning shell integration on Windows when using the default PowerShell execution policy of RemoteSigned should now start working automatically. You can read more about shell integration's benefits here . Terminal shell type This iteration, we've finalized our terminal shell API, allowing extensions to see the user's current shell type in their terminal. Subscribing to event onDidChangeTerminalState allows you to see the changes of the user's shell type in the terminal. For example, the shell could change from zsh to bash. The list of all the shells that are identifiable are currently listed here Remote Development Linux legacy server support has ended As of release 1.99, you can no longer connect to these servers. As noted in our 1.97 release , users that require additional time to complete migration to a supported Linux distro can provide custom builds of glibc and libstdc++ as a workaround. More info on this workaround can be found in the FAQ section. Enterprise macOS device management VS Code now supports device management on macOS in addition to Windows. This allows system administrators to push policies from a centralized management system, like Microsoft Intune. See the Enterprise Support documentation for more details. Contributions to extensions Python Better support for editable installs with Pylance Pylance now supports resolving import paths for packages installed in editable mode ( pip install -e . ) as defined by PEP 660 , which enables an improved IntelliSense experience in these scenarios. This feature is enabled via python.analysis.enableEditableInstalls and we plan to start rolling it out as the default experience throughout this month. If you experience any issues, please report them at the Pylance GitHub repository . Faster and more reliable diagnostic experience with Pylance (Experimental) We're starting to roll out a change to improve the accuracy and responsiveness of Pylance's diagnostics when using the release version of the extension. This is especially helpful for scenarios with multiple open or recently closed files. If you do not want to wait for the roll-out, you can set python.analysis.usePullDiagnostics . If you experience any issues, please report them at the Pylance GitHub repository . Pylance custom Node.js arguments There's a new python.analysis.nodeArguments setting, which allows you to pass custom arguments directly to Node.js when using python.analysis.nodeExecutable . By default, it is set to "--max-old-space-size=8192" , but you can modify it to suit your needs (for example, to allocate more memory to Node.js when working with large workspaces). Additionally, when setting python.analysis.nodeExecutable to auto , Pylance now automatically downloads Node.js. Extension authoring Terminal.shellIntegration tweaks The Terminal.shellIntegration API will now only light up when command detection happens. Previously, this should work when only the current working directory was reported, which caused TerminalShellIntegration.executeCommand to not function well. Additionally, TerminalShellIntegration.executeCommand will now behave more consistently and track multiple "sub-executions" for a single command line that ended up running multiple commands. This depends on rich shell integration as mentioned in the reliability in agent mode section . Proposed APIs Task problem matcher status We've added proposed API , so that extensions can monitor when a task's problem matchers start and finish processing lines. Enable it with taskProblemMatcherStatus . Send images to LLM This iteration, we've added a proposed API , so that extensions can attach images and send vision requests to the language model. Attachments must be the raw, non base64-encoded binary data of the image ( Uint8Array ). Maximum image size is 5MB. Check out this API proposal issue to see a usage example and to stay up to date with the status of this API. Engineering Use new /latest API from Marketplace to check for extensions updates Couple of milestones back, we introduced a new API endpoint in vscode-unpkg service to check for extension updates. Marketplace now supports the same endpoint and VS Code is now using this endpoint to check for extension updates. This is behind an experiment and will be rolled out to users in stages. Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @albertosantini (Alberto Santini) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @RedCMD (RedCMD) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @a-stewart (Anthony Stewart) : Add a 2 hour offset to tests to avoid being a day short after the clocks change PR #243194 @acdzh (Vukk) : Fix hasEdits flag's value when updating multiple values in JSONEditingService PR #243876 @c-claeys (Cristopher Claeys) : Increment the request attempt in the chat retry action PR #243471 @ChaseKnowlden (Chase Knowlden) : Add Merge Editor Accessibility help PR #240745 @dibarbet (David Barbet) : Update C# onEnterRules to account for documentation comments PR #242121 @dsanders11 (David Sanders) : Fix a few broken @link in vscode.d.ts PR #242407 @jacekkopecky (Jacek Kopecký) : Honor more cursor settings in scm input editor PR #242903 @joelverhagen (Joel Verhagen) : Show support URL and license URL even if extension URL is not set PR #243565 @kevmo314 (Kevin Wang) : Fix comment typo PR #243145 @liudonghua123 (liudonghua) : support explorer.copyPathSeparator PR #184884 @mattmaniak : Make telemetry info table a little bit narrower and aligned PR #233961 @notoriousmango (Seong Min Park) fix: use the copy command for images with CORS errors in the markdown preview PR #240508 Fix Incorrect character indentation on settings with line break PR #242074 @pprchal (Pavel Prchal) : Added localization to right-click on icon PR #243679 @SimonSiefke (Simon Siefke) : feature: support font family picker in settings PR #214572 @tribals (Anthony) : Add discovery of PowerShell Core user installation PR #243025 @tusharsadhwani (Tushar Sadhwani) : Make git show ref argument unambiguous PR #242483 @wszgrcy (chen) : fix: extension uncaughtException listen Maximum call stack size exceeded PR #244690 @zyoshoka (zyoshoka) : Correct typescript-basics extension path PR #243833 Contributions to vscode-css-languageservice : @lilnasy (Arsh) : Support @starting-style PR #421 Contributions to vscode-custom-data : @rviscomi (Rick Viscomi) : Add computed Baseline status PR #111 Contributions to vscode-extension-samples : @ratmice (matt rice) : Fix esbuild scripts PR #1154 Contributions to vscode-extension-telemetry : @minestarks (Mine Starks) : Remove extra brace from common.platformversion PR #221 Contributions to vscode-js-debug : @erikson84 (Erikson Kaszubowski) : fix: ensure backslash in path when setting breakpoints in windows PR #2184 @xymopen (xymopen_Official) : Support usenode as npm script runner PR #2178 Contributions to vscode-mypy : @ivirabyan (Ivan Virabyan) : Report only files specified by mypy config PR #352 Contributions to vscode-prompt-tsx : @dsanders11 (David Sanders) : docs: fix sendRequest API name in README example PR #159 @tamuratak (Takashi Tamura) fix: text should be this.props.text PR #163 Fix the Usage in Tools section in README.md PR #164 Contributions to vscode-pull-request-github : @aedm (Gábor Gyebnár) : Adds sanitizedLowercaseIssueTitle to settings docs PR #6690 Contributions to vscode-python-debugger : @rchiodo (Rich Chiodo) : Update debugpy to latest version PR #653 Contributions to vscode-test : @SKaplanOfficial (Stephen Kaplan) : fix: avoid 'Invalid extraction directory' when unzipping PR #303 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @MariaSolOs (Maria José Solano) : Update range formatting capabilities in metamodel PR #2106 Contributions to python-environment-tools : @CharlesChen0823 : bump winreg PR #195 @elprans (Elvis Pranskevichus) Avoid misdetecting global Linux Python as virtualenv PR #197 Fix env version detection on systems with multiple system Pythons PR #198 Populate name in virtualenvwrapper envs PR #199 On this page there are 14 sections On this page Chat Configure the editor Code Editing Notebooks Accessibility Source Control Terminal Remote Development Enterprise Contributions to extensions Extension authoring Proposed APIs Engineering Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_109 | January 2026 Insiders (version 1.109) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 January 2026 Insiders (version 1.109) Last updated: January 11, 2026 These release notes cover the Insiders build of VS Code and continue to evolve as new features are added. To try the latest updates, download Insiders . To read these release notes online, go to code.visualstudio.com/updates . You can still track our progress in the Commit log and our list of Closed issues . These release notes were generated using GitHub Copilot and might contain inaccuracies. Happy Coding! In this update January 11, 2026 January 8, 2026 January 7, 2026 December 28, 2025 Navigation End --> January 11, 2026 The terminal now supports the kitty keyboard protocol (CSI u), enabling more sophisticated keyboard input handling and providing access to previously unavailable key combinations. #286809 The terminal now supports win32-input-mode, improving keyboard handling compatibility with Windows console applications. #286896 The terminal now supports SGR 221 and 222 escape sequences, allowing independent control of bold and faint text attributes for more granular formatting control. #286810 Improved discoverability of archived chat sessions in the Chat view, making it easier to locate and access previously archived conversations. #286815 January 8, 2026 The terminal tool now supports a timeout parameter to control how long terminal commands run before timing out, preventing unnecessary polling commands. #286598 Updated the list of npm commands that are safe for automatic execution. #286463 The terminal suggest toolbar no longer shows the selection mode option when quick suggestions are disabled, reducing confusion. #286440 The terminal.integrated.suggest.quickSuggestions setting can now be configured in the Settings editor instead of requiring manual JSON editing. #286075 Added a workbench.mcp.startServer command to start a specific or all MCP servers to discover their tools. #283959 Exploration work on rich integrated web browser using WebContentsView or controlledframe to overcome limitations of the current iframe-based Simple Browser. #277298 A new proposed API enables extensions to show buttons inline after the input box in quick inputs, in addition to the title bar location. #221397 January 7, 2026 You can now import a chat session into the Chat view instead of only opening it in a new editor tab. #283954 Fixed an issue where auto approval information for the fetch tool was not visible when hovering over the tool call. #282238 Added built-in support for MCP Apps, enabling servers to provide custom UI for tool invocation. #260218 December 28, 2025 The quick input now supports overflow buttons, enabling secondary actions to be placed in an overflow menu. #285213 We really appreciate people trying our new features as soon as they are ready, so check back here often and learn what's new. On this page there are 4 sections On this page January 11, 2026 January 8, 2026 January 7, 2026 December 28, 2025 Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_108 | December 2025 (version 1.108) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 December 2025 (version 1.108) Release date: January 08, 2026 Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the December 2025 release of Visual Studio Code. Traditionally, the month of December is a time where our team focuses on cleaning up GitHub issues and pull requests across our repositories. This year, we managed to reduce our open issues by nearly 6,000 and triaged over a thousand more. In addition to our housekeeping efforts, we have also made several improvements and feature updates across various areas of VS Code. Happy Coding! If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Download Insiders In this update Agents Chat Accessibility Editor Experience Code Editing Source Control Terminal Debug Testing Contributions to extensions Extension Authoring Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Navigation End --> Agents Agent Skills (Experimental) Setting : chat.useAgentSkills VS Code now supports Agent Skills , allowing you to teach the coding agent new capabilities and provide domain-specific knowledge. Agent Skills are folders of instructions, scripts, and resources that GitHub Copilot can load when relevant to perform specialized tasks. Skills are stored in directories with a SKILL.md file that defines the skill's behavior. VS Code automatically detects skills from the .github/skills folder in your workspace (or .claude/skills/ for backwards compatibility). They are then loaded on-demand into the chat context when relevant for your request. Enable support for Agent Skills by enabling the chat.useAgentSkills setting. Learn more about creating and using skills in the Agent Skills documentation . Improvements to Agent Sessions view This iteration, we further improved the Agent Sessions view with several enhancements: Keyboard access support for actions such as archive, read state, opening a session Grouping of sessions based on state and age when showing side-by-side Provide information on changed files and associated PRs for a session Support for archiving multiple sessions at once from the new group sections General accessibility improvements Note : chat.viewSessions.orientation no longer provides the auto option. Use sideBySide as alternative. Chat Chat picker is based on agent sessions The Quick Pick for chat sessions is now based on the same information that drives the Agent Sessions view. You can access any previous chat session from there and perform actions like archiving, renaming or deletion. Note : Agent sessions can also be accessed by typing agent in the Quick Open control ( ⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+P ) ). Chat title improvements The Chat view title control is now showing up, irrespective of how the Activity Bar is configured. Previously, it only showed up in the default Activity Bar configuration. To quickly jump from one session to another, select the chat title to open the sessions Quick Pick and choose another session. Open empty Chat on restart Setting : chat.restoreLastPanelSession From now on, previous chat sessions are not automatically restored when VS Code is restarted. Instead, an empty Chat view is shown where you can then access previous sessions from the Agent Sessions control. Modify this behavior with the chat.restoreLastPanelSession setting. Terminal tool auto approve default rules Settings : chat.tools.terminal.enableAutoApprove , chat.tools.terminal.autoApproveWorkspaceNpmScripts The following commands are now auto approved by default when terminal auto approve is enabled ( chat.tools.terminal.enableAutoApprove ): git ls-files git --no-pager <safe_subcommand> git -C <dir> <safe_subcommand> rg (excluding --pre and --hostname-bin ) sed (excluding some args and usage patterns) Out-String In addition, npm scripts run through npm , pnpm or yarn are now auto approved by default when they are included within the package.json . We do this because using agents already requires Workspace Trust, and we protect agents from editing sensitive files like package.json . This can be disabled with chat.tools.terminal.autoApproveWorkspaceNpmScripts . To improve transparency around auto approve, there is now an informational message when a rule was explicitly denied by either default or custom rules: Add session and workspace rules for future terminal tool commands The allowed commands or command line entries in the Allow dropdown now have options a corresponding action to allow them for the current session or for the workspace. Terminal tool preventing adding to shell history Setting : chat.tools.terminal.preventShellHistory When shell integration is enabled and working, commands that are run by the terminal tool are no longer included in shell history for bash, zsh, pwsh and fish. The method this uses differs for each shell, for bash for example HISTCONTROL=ignorespace is set and a space is added to the start of the command being run. If you prefer to keep terminal tool commands in the shell history, configure this with the chat.tools.terminal.preventShellHistory setting. Accessibility Streaming chat responses in Accessible View The Accessible View now dynamically streams chat responses as they are generated. Previously, you needed to close and reopen the Accessible View to see updated content. Now, you can stay in the Accessible View and monitor output as it comes in, making it much easier to follow along with AI responses in real-time. MCP server output excluded from Accessible View To reduce noise, MCP (Model Context Protocol) server output is now excluded from the Accessible View by default. The standard chat output remains fully accessible, as it's presented in a text area that works well with screen readers. Language ID variable in window title A new ${activeEditorLanguageId} variable is now available for the window.title setting. This variable displays the language identifier of the currently active editor, which is useful for accessibility tools like Talon that need to determine the current programming language to enable appropriate voice commands. "window.title" : "${activeEditorLanguageId} - ${activeEditorShort}" Editor Experience Import profile by drag and drop You can now import a settings profile by dragging and dropping a .code-profile file into VS Code. This makes it easier to share profiles with teammates or quickly set up a new environment. When you drop the file, the Profiles editor opens and lets you preview and import the profile. This provides a similar experience to dragging and dropping a .code-workspace file to open a workspace. Copy breadcrumbs path Setting : breadcrumbs.symbolPathSeparator You can now copy the breadcrumbs path to the clipboard by using the Copy Breadcrumbs Path command. This is useful when you need to share the exact location of a symbol with your team or for documentation purposes. The breadcrumbs.symbolPathSeparator setting enables you to customize the separator character used to join breadcrumb segments. Go to Symbol in Workspace supports special characters in query The Go to Symbol in Workspace ( ⌘T (Windows, Linux Ctrl+T ) ) feature no longer incorrectly filters out all results when the search query contains a # character. This fix enables language extensions like rust-analyzer to use # as a modifier in symbol searches. For example, in rust-analyzer, appending # to a query like main# searches for functions in current workspace only. Code Editing New snippet tranformations There are two new snippet transformations available: snakecase and kebabcase . This is how you can use them: For snake_case transformation: ${TM_FILENAME/(.*)/${1:/snakecase}/} This transforms the filename to snake-case format. For example, from MyFileName.txt it makes my_file_name.txt . The kebab-case transformation would be my-file-name.txt . Source Control Git blame information settings Settings : git.blame.ignoreWhitespace , git.blame.editorDecoration.disableHover The new git.blame.ignoreWhitespace setting enables you to configure Git blame to ignore whitespace changes when determining which commit last modified a line. This is particularly useful when working with code that has been reformatted, as it helps you identify the commit that made the actual functional change rather than just whitespace adjustments. Additionally, the git.blame.editorDecoration.disableHover setting lets you disable the hover tooltip that appears when you hover over a Git blame editor decoration. This can be useful if you prefer a cleaner editing experience and only want to see the inline blame annotations without the additional hover information. Authoring commit messages using the editor Some time ago we added the capability to use the full editor to author a commit message but the actions to commit or cancel were difficult to discover in the editor title toolbar. We improved the editor overlay control in the lower right-hand corner of the editor and moved these actions there to make them easier to use. Worktrees in the Source Control Repositories view (Experimental) Settings : scm.repositories.explorer , scm.repositories.selectionMode This milestone, we have added a Worktrees node to the Source Control Repositories view. Under this node, you can see the list of the repository worktrees with an inline action to open the worktree in a new window. The context menu also contains an action to open the worktree in the current window, as well as an action to delete the worktree. You can enable the experimental repository explorer by setting the scm.repositories.selectionMode and scm.repositories.explorer settings. Give it a try and let us know what other repository artifacts you would like to see in the Repositories explorer. Learn more about using source control in VS Code . Terminal Terminal IntelliSense default UX rework During the past two releases, we rolled out terminal IntelliSense to all VS Code Stable users. While much of the feedback was positive, there was a segment of users (mostly terminal power users) that did not like the feature breaking their muscle memory. After a lot of discussion, we decided to switch some defaults, improve discoverability and allow easier inline configuration of the feature. The feature itself is still enabled by default, but instead of showing the control automatically when typing (quick suggestions and suggest on trigger characters), it now needs to be explicitly triggered via Ctrl+Space . We also improved the "status bar" on the bottom. Previously, it showed insert on the left and Learn more/Configure on the right with their associated keybindings. We got feedback that it's not clear that these can be interacted with, so we now show icons on the right and no longer show the keybindings. The left action now allows rotating through the options for "selection mode", which determines how Tab and Enter react when it's brought up. There's a new eye icon on the right, which enables quick suggestions and suggest on trigger characters again. Finally, to still make this powerful feature relatively discoverable without being overbearing, a hint shows when opening a terminal that explains how to show suggestions. The lifecycle of the hint is simplified and it's as easy as clicking "don't show" to get rid of it permanently, just like the similar feature in the editor. Beyond this UX rework, these improvements were also done to terminal IntelliSense: We now show files with the executable bit on macOS/Linux Improved completions for npm and git Several fixes to the feature Performance and stability improvements The terminal saw several important performance and stability improvements this release: node-pty#831 : On macOS and Linux, pasting more than 50 characters at once or having Copilot run a large command is no longer throttled and should apply essentially instantly, scaling similarly to other terminals with KBs/MBs of data. This also fixed a crash that could happen on macOS when doing the same thing. vscode#285031 , vscode#285032 , xterm.js#5548 : Fixed several layout thrashing issues that could cause the editor to get laggy. vscode#239541 : Fixed a crash that could occur when fonts such as CommitMono were configured in the terminal. More comprehensive custom glyphs The terminal's GPU accelerated renderer (on by default) has supported custom glyphs for some time for box drawing, block element, and a subset of powerline symbols. This means that you can see these characters without needing to configure a font and they also scale with line height, letter spacing, and should align with each other perfectly. In this release, we expanded the number of characters supported to almost 800 by including the majority of custom glyphs supported by any other terminal. This includes ranges that are generally useful in a terminal, specifically these ranges: Box Drawing ( U+2500 - U+257F ) Block Elements ( U+2580 - U+259F ) Braille Patterns ( U+2800 - U+28FF ) Powerline Symbols ( U+E0A0 - U+E0D4 , Private Use Area) Progress Indicators ( U+EE00 - U+EE0B , Private Use Area) Git Branch Symbols ( U+F5D0 - U+F60D , Private Use Area) Symbols for Legacy Computing ( U+1FB00 - U+1FBFF ) Here's a visual of the complete set of glyphs: Improved rendering of curly underlines VS Code has been able to parse and display colored and styled underlines for some time now, but the curly underline's rendering always left something to be desired. The curly underlines should now look very close to how they look in the editor. You can try this out for yourself by running this command in bash: echo -e '\x1b[4:3mCurly\x1b[0m \x1b[4:3m\x1b[58;5;1mRed\x1b[0m' Dimensions visual overlay on resize Inspired by a feature in ghostty , we added a brief overlay that shows the current terminal dimensions (columns x rows) when you resize the terminal. This is useful if you want to resize your terminal to a specific size for testing or other purposes. New VT features The terminal now supports the follow VT features/sequences: Synchronized output : can be used by applications to pause rendering and batch updates in the terminal, which is particularly useful to prevent tearing when rewriting the buffer. DECRQM ( CSI ? 2026 $ p ) BSU ( CSI ? 2026 h ) ESU ( CSI ? 2026 l ) XTVERSION ( CSI > 0 q ): allows applications to query details about the terminal, the response VS Code will give currently is the "xterm.js" and its version Debug Organize breakpoints by file Setting : debug.breakpointsView.presentation Breakpoints can now be shown as a tree, grouped by their file. Enable this by setting debug.breakpointsView.presentation to tree . Testing Navigate to uncovered regions We've added navigation buttons to the test coverage toolbar that allow you to easily jump between regions of uncovered code. You can toggle the test coverage toolbar using the Test: Show Coverage Toolbar command in the Command Palette. Contributions to extensions GitHub Pull Requests There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests extension, which enables you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. New features include: Change a pull request's base branch from the pull request description webview. Convert open pull requests to draft from the pull request description webview. Generate a pull request description for an existing PR, not just new ones. Review the changelog for the 0.126.0 release of the extension to learn about everything in the release. Extension Authoring New Quick Pick properties for prompts and resource URIs The Quick Pick API includes two new properties for creating interactive selection interfaces. Use the prompt property on QuickPick to display persistent instructional text beneath the input box. The text remains visible while users type, which helps provide guidance or context. const quickPick = vscode . window . createQuickPick (); quickPick . prompt = 'Select a file to open' ; quickPick . items = items ; quickPick . show (); Use the resourceUri property on QuickPickItem to automatically derive item properties from a resource URI. When provided, VS Code derives: The label from the file name (when set to an empty string) The description from the file path (when set to undefined or an empty string) The icon from the current file icon theme (when iconPath is set to ThemeIcon.File or ThemeIcon.Folder ) This is useful when building file or folder selection interfaces. const items : vscode . QuickPickItem [] = [ { label: '' , resourceUri: vscode . Uri . file ( '/path/to/app.ts' ), iconPath: vscode . ThemeIcon . File }, { label: '' , resourceUri: vscode . Uri . file ( '/path/to/src' ), iconPath: vscode . ThemeIcon . Folder } ]; Engineering Housekeeping As part of our annual December housekeeping, we spent a majority of time cleaning up GitHub issues and pull requests across all our maintained repositories. This year, we managed to reduce our open issues by 5,951 and triaged another 1,203 issues . By using improved triage tooling and deduplication processes, we were able to close a significant number of stale and resolved issues. This has left us with a more manageble project, enabling us to move forward and develop the features that have the most impact for our users. In our core VS Code repository alone, we closed 2,872 issues and triaged another 1,697! In June of 2025, we also announced that Copilot had become Open Source! This meant that all related issues would also be filed in the microsoft/vscode repo, and that we had a backlog of issues remaining in microsoft/vscode-copilot-release to take care of. This month, we triaged every issue in the repository and closed 1,659 issues, leaving only 175 open to be migrated. Below is a graph that shows how our core vscode repository has grown over the years, and how many issues our amazing community has contributed over time. We appreciate everyone who has contributed issues to our repositories over the years and continued to engage with us. Your feedback is what has made VS Code the product that it is today! 🚀 Authoring extensions in TypeScript (Experimental) It is now possible to author VS Code extensions directly in TypeScript without requiring a build step. This works... but there is still a bit of adventure involved! Many aspects are still untested, such as how to write and run tests, how to publish extensions, and other workflow considerations. Learn more about this experimental approach in this GitHub comment . Notable fixes vscode#283356 - Fixed regression causing jumping around while scrolling past some chat output Thank you Contributions to vscode : @abhijit-chikane (Abhijit Chikane) : fix: hover focus border cutting at the corners PR #259548 @alievilshat (Ilshat Aliyev) : Fixed wrong negation in the _shouldRenderHint logic. PR #242479 @Andarist (Mateusz Burzyński) : Simplify TestInstantiationService#stub overloads PR #282223 @anki-code (Andy Kipp) : Added Xonsh shell type PR #284044 @aryla (Arttu Ylä-Outinen) : Fix sticky scroll hover listeners piling up PR #260020 @AviVahl (Avi Vahl) : fix: ensure fallback to default system monospace font PR #282747 @BartolHrg : fix copy with multiple cursors and empty selections PR #256083 @Beace (Beace) : fix: fix terminal webgl context memory leak PR #279579 @bibaswan-bhawal (Bibaswan Bhawal) : fix(extensions): allow extensionButton.prominentBackground to take effect PR #276788 @chaitanyamedidar (Chaitanya Medidar) : Fix Swipe to navigate setting missing description #281997 PR #282220 @CyMad7001 (Cyril Madigan) : #196344 - Fix installer hang issue PR #228233 @daiyam (Baptiste Augrain) : fix: correctly pass extension's id when version is also provided PR #279630 @eidriahn (Adrian Luca) : fix: fixes icons not showing when hovering quick pick checkboxes PR #285250 @erezak (Erez Korn) : Chat: hide Apply in Editor from Command Palette PR #283486 @flying-sheep (Philipp A.) : fix: set LANGUAGE for Git PR #285410 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) : Standardize the breadcrumb toggle option label (fix #257550) PR #284486 @hickford (M Hickford) : Reverse lines: apply to whole document when selection is single line PR #257031 @irengrig (Irina Chernushina) : Fix memory leak with installing cursor change position listener PR #267799 @isksss (isksss) : Update: Fixed so that MARK can be used in vue files etc. PR #283583 @izolotarev (Igor) : Fix color detection in hsl saturation PR #266720 @jakebailey (Jake Bailey) : Replace old-style TS modules with namespaces PR #282862 @jcpetruzza (Daniel Gorin) : debug: Fix UI freezing on "continue" with high number of threads PR #283635 @JeffreyCA : Update Fig spec for Azure Developer CLI (azd) PR #281127 @joeriddles (Joe Riddle) : Add snakecase to snippets syntax PR #237110 @josephxiao8 (Joseph Xiao) : Expected Final Selection After Running Delete Duplicate Lines PR #234799 @junhaoliao (Junhao Liao) : Suppress unhandled errors in WordHighlighter's runDelayer triggers. PR #285887 @kheif (Mehmet Ege Aydın) : workbench: add commands to move editor to start and end PR #284999 @kortin99 (Kortin Zhou) : feat(snippets): add support for kebab-case in snippets tmLanguage syntax PR #222319 @maynkxx (mayank choudhary) : docs: update Twitter branding to X in README PR #280235 @milanchahar (MILAN CHAHAR) : Fix terminal icon picker placement PR #281275 @mizdra (mizdra) : Fix tests that failed in environments where XDG_DATA_HOME is set PR #285402 @MohamedEmirHajji (Mohamed Emir HAJJI) Add more git log options to completions PR #282311 Markdown preview: filter hidden elements from scroll sync (fix #281247) PR #282506 @murataslan1 (Murat Aslan) fix: avoid jumpy scrolling when navigating next/prev problem PR #285634 Fix: Replace terminal tabbed view lifecycle hack with Event.once PR #285657 Fix: Replace terminal view lifecycle hack with Event.once PR #285661 @NriotHrreion (Norcleeh) : fix: Latest input is not stored to the history when sending message to a new chat PR #282633 @odinGitGmail (odinsam) : fix(debug): support C# stack trace format in debug console links PR #281536 @przpl : fix(runSubagent): collect computed attachments PR #283750 @rducom (Raphael DUCOM) : Fix ReDoS in PowerShell prompt detection PR #279853 @RedCMD (RedCMD) Add TS/JS Template surrounding brackets PR #255972 Fix php indenting #248229 PR #258016 Fix FormatOnSave when modificationsIfAvailable PR #283726 Support # pragma folding markers in C PR #284927 @remcohaszing (Remco Haszing) : Fix editor edge clicking PR #262964 @Riya-chandra (RIYA_CHANDRA) : Show command descriptions as tooltips in Command Palette PR #284609 @SalerSimo (Simone Salerno) Exclude terminal editors from recently closed editors history PR #282009 Refactor virtual model creation logic in MoveLinesCommand PR #284785 @SimonSiefke (Simon Siefke) fix: memory leak in terminal editor PR #279088 fix: memory leak in terminal process PR #279167 fix: memory leak in terminal process PR #279172 fix: memory leak in accessibility signal PR #279242 fix: memory leak in local process extension host PR #279351 fix: memory leak in extension icon widget PR #280566 fix: memory leak in markdown hover PR #280745 fix: memory leak in debug session PR #281767 fix: memory leak in status bar PR #282246 fix: memory leak in ipc PR #282253 fix: memory leak in chat list renderer PR #282560 fix: memory leak in notebook code scrolling PR #283452 fix: memory leak in terminal find widget PR #283466 fix: memory leak in mainThreadLanguages PR #283498 fix: memory leak in chat widget PR #284288 fix: memory leak in terminal chat widget PR #284325 fix: memory leak call stack widget PR #286246 @sudip-kumar-prasad (Sudip Kumar Prasad) : Fix: use codicon id for Command Prompt default profile icon PR #280967 @tamuratak (Takashi Tamura) fix: ensure finishedEditing is called in ChatWidget PR #281763 include uppercase -I in sed in-place option detection PR #284645 Fix context handling in ChatWidget while re-editing PR #285099 @ThanhNguyxn (Thanh Nguyen) : fix: Panel doesn't close when maximized and center-aligned (fixes #281772) PR #281773 @tharani-2006 : Terminal: show dimensions overlay while resizing PR #284244 @tt0mmy (Tommy) : Fix duplicate description in terminal suggestion config PR #279730 @yavanosta (Dmitry Guketlev) Fix backward selection when EditContext is off PR #273150 InlineEditsView: remove redeclaration of textModel PR #281501 SingleUpdatedNextEdit: Correctly apply insertion changes PR #281519 Contributions to vscode-copilot-chat : @AbdelrahmanAbouelenin (ababouelenin) : Update system prompt for VSCModelB. PR #2727 @bharatvansh (Ayush Singh) : fix(byok): improve Gemini provider error handling and add tests PR #2686 Contributions to vscode-js-profile-visualizer : @xiaoxiangmoe (ZHAO Jin-Xiang) : chore: remove useless package-lock.json files PR #216 Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @RedCMD (RedCMD) @tamuratak (Takashi Tamura) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @albertosantini (Alberto Santini) We really appreciate people trying our new features as soon as they are ready, so check back here often and learn what's new. If you'd like to read release notes for previous VS Code versions, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . On this page there are 14 sections On this page Agents Chat Accessibility Editor Experience Code Editing Source Control Terminal Debug Testing Contributions to extensions Extension Authoring Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_89 | April 2024 (version 1.89) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. 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Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the April 2024 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Preview Markdown images & videos - Hover over a link to preview images & videos in Markdown. Enhanced branch switching - Restore open editors seamlessly when switching between branches. Middle-click paste support - Paste text quickly in the terminal using a mouse middle-click. WSL over Remote - SSH - Use WSL when connected to a remote machine via Remote - SSH. Accessible View - Navigate through comments, chat code blocks & terminal commands from the Accessible View. Keyboard shortcuts for UI actions - Customize keybindings for UI actions directly with a right-click. Quick Search - Search for text across your workspace with Quick Search. AI-powered rename suggestions - Get intelligent rename suggestions in the editor with Copilot. Copilot content exclusion - Exclude files from being used in the Copilot context. Local workspace extension - Include and install extensions directly in your workspace. If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Accessibility Progress accessibility signal The setting, accessibility.signals.progress , enables screen reader users to hear progress anywhere a progress bar is presented in the user interface. The signal plays after three seconds have elapsed, and then loops every five seconds until completion of the progress bar. Examples of when a signal might play are: when searching a workspace, while a chat response is pending, when a notebook cell is running, and more. Improved editor accessibility signals There are now separate accessibility signals for when a line has an error or warning, or when the cursor is on an error or warning. We support customizing the delay of accessibility signals when navigating between lines and columns in the editor separately. Also, aria alert signals have a higher delay before playing them than audio cue signals. Inline suggestions no longer trigger an accessibility signal while the suggest control is shown. Accessible View The Accessible View ( ⌥F2 (Windows Alt+F2 , Linux Shift+Alt+F2 ) ) enables screen reader users to inspect workbench features. Terminal improvements Now, when you navigate to the next ( ⌥↓ (Windows, Linux Alt+Down ) ) or previous ( ⌥↑ (Windows, Linux Alt+Up ) ) command in the terminal Accessible View, you can hear if the current command failed. This functionality can be toggled with the setting accessibility.signals.terminalCommandFailed . When this view is opened from a terminal with shell integration enabled, VS Code alerts with the terminal command line for an improved experience. Chat code block navigation When you're in the Accessible View for a chat response, you can now navigate between next ( ⌥⌘PageDown (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Alt+PageDown ) ) and previous ( ⌥⌘PageUp (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Alt+PageUp ) ) code blocks. Comments view When there is an extension installed that is providing comments and the Comments view is focused, you can inspect and navigate between the comments in the view from within the Accessible View. Extension-provided actions that are available on the comments can also be executed from the Accessible View. Workbench Language model usage reporting For extensions that use the language model, you can now track their language model usage in the Extension Editor and Runtime Extensions Editor. For example, you can view the number of language model requests, as demonstrated for the Copilot Chat extension in the following screenshot: Local workspace extensions Local workspace extensions, first introduced in the VS Code 1.88 release , is generally available. You can now include an extension directly in your workspace and install it only for that workspace. This feature is designed to cater to your specific workspace needs and provide a more tailored development experience. To use this feature, you need to have your extension in the .vscode/extensions folder within your workspace. VS Code then shows this extension in the Workspace Recommendations section of the Extensions view, from where users can install it. VS Code installs this extension only for that workspace. A local workspace extension requires the user to trust the workspace before installing and running this extension. For instance, consider the vscode-selfhost-test-provider extension in the VS Code repository . This extension plugs in test capabilities, enabling contributors to view and run tests directly within the workspace. Following screenshot shows the vscode-selfhost-test-provider extension in the Workspace Recommendations section of the Extensions view and the ability to install it. Note that you should include the unpacked extension in the .vscode/extensions folder and not the VSIX file. You can also include only sources of the extension and build it as part of your workspace setup. Custom Editor Labels in Quick Open Last month, we introduced custom labels , which let you personalize the labels of your editor tabs. This feature is designed to help you more easily distinguish between tabs for files with the same name, such as index.tsx files. Building on that, we've extended the use of custom labels to Quick Open ( ⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+P ) ). Now, you can search for your files using the custom labels you've created, making file navigation more intuitive. Customize keybindings We've made it more straightforward to customize keybindings for user interface actions. Right-click on any action item in your workbench, and select Customize Keybinding . If the action has a when clause, it's automatically included, making it easier to set up your keybindings just the way you need them. Find in trees keybinding We have addressed an issue where the Find control was frequently being opened unintentionally for a tree control. For example, when the Find control appears in the Explorer view instead of searching in the editor. To reduce these accidental activations, we have changed the default keybinding for opening the Find control in a tree control to ⌥⌘F (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Alt+F ) . If you prefer the previous setup, you can easily revert to the original keybinding for the list.find command using the Keyboard Shortcuts editor. Auto detect system color mode improvements If you wanted your theme to follow the color mode of your system, you could already do this by enabling the setting window.autoDetectColorScheme . When enabled, the current theme is defined by the workbench.preferredDarkColorTheme setting when in dark mode, and the workbench.preferredLightColorTheme setting when in light mode. In that case, the workbench.colorTheme setting is then no longer considered. It is only used when window.autoDetectColorScheme is off. In this milestone, what's new is that the theme picker dialog ( Preferences: Color Theme command) is now aware of the system color mode. Notice how the theme selection only shows dark themes when the system in in dark mode: The dialog also has a new button to directly take you to the window.autoDetectColorScheme setting: Paste Markdown links in comments In the input editor of the Comments control, pasting a link has the same behavior as pasting a link in a Markdown file. The paste options are shown and you can choose to paste a Markdown link instead of the raw link that you copied. Source Control Save/restore open editors when switching branches This milestone, we have addressed a long-standing feature request to save and restore editors when switching between source control branches. Use the scm.workingSets.enabled setting to enable this feature. To control the open editors when switching to a branch for the first time, you can use the scm.workingSets.default setting. You select to have no open editors ( empty ), or to use the currently opened editors ( current , the default value). Dedicated commands for viewing changes To make it easier to view specific types of changes in the multi-file diff editor, we have added a set of new commands to the command palette: Git: View Staged Changes , Git: View Changes , and Git: View Untracked Changes . Notebooks Minimal error renderer You can use a new layout for the notebook error renderer with the setting notebook.output.minimalErrorRendering . This new layout only displays the error and message, and a control to expand the full error stack into view. Disabled backups for large notebooks Periodic file backups are now disabled for large notebook files to reduce the amount of time spent writing the file to disk. The limit can be adjusted with the setting notebook.backup.sizeLimit . We are also experimenting with an option to avoid blocking the renderer while saving the notebook file with notebook.experimental.remoteSave , so that auto-saves can occur without a performance penalty. Fix for outline/sticky scroll performance regressions Over the past few months, we have received feedback about performance regressions in the notebook editor. The regressions are difficult to pinpoint and not easily reproducible. Thanks to the community for continuously providing logs and feedback, we could identify that the regressions are coming from the outline and sticky scroll features as we added new features to them. The issues have been fixed in this release. We appreciate the community's feedback and patience, and we continue to improve Notebook Editor's performance. If you continue to experience performance issues, please don't hesitate to file a new issue in the VS Code repo . Search Quick Search Quick Search enables you to quickly perform a text search across your workspace files. Quick Search is no longer experimental, so give it a try by using the Search: Quick Search command in the Command Palette ( ⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P ) )! ✨🔍 Theme: Night Owl Light (preview on vscode.dev ) Note that all Quick Search commands and settings no longer have the "experimental" keyword in their identifier. For example, the command ID workbench.action.experimental.quickTextSearch became workbench.action.quickTextSearch . This might be relevant if you have settings or keybindings that use these old IDs. Search tree recursive expansion We have a new context menu option that enables you to recursively open a selected tree node in the search tree. Theme: Night Owl Light (preview on vscode.dev ) Terminal Git Bash shell integration enabled by default Shell integration for Git Bash is now automatically enabled . This brings many features to Git Bash, such as command navigation , sticky scroll , quick fixes , and more. Configure middle click to paste On most Linux distributions, middle-click pastes the selection. Similar behavior can now be enabled on other operating systems by configuring terminal.integrated.middleClickBehavior to paste , which pastes the regular clipboard content on middle-click. Expanded ANSI hyperlink support ANSI hyperlinks made via the OSC 8 escape sequence previously supported only http and https protocols but now work with any protocol. By default, only links with the file , http , https , mailto , vscode and vscode-insiders protocols activate for security reasons, but you can add more via the terminal.integrated.allowedLinkSchemes setting. New icon picker for the terminal Selecting the change icon from the terminal tab context menu now opens the new icon picker that was built for profiles: Theme: Sapphire (preview on vscode.dev ) Support for window size reporting The terminal now responds to the following escape sequence requests: CSI 14 t to report the terminal's window size in pixels CSI 16 t to report the terminal's cell size in pixels CSI 18 t to report the terminal's window size in characters ⚠️ Deprecation of the canvas renderer The terminal features three different renderers: the DOM renderer, the WebGL renderer, and the canvas renderer. We have wanted to remove the canvas renderer for some time but were blocked by unacceptable performance in the DOM renderer and WebKit not implementing webgl2 . Both of these issues have now been resolved! This release, we removed the canvas renderer from the fallback chain so it's only enabled when the terminal.integrated.gpuAcceleration setting is explicitly set to "canvas" . We plan to remove the canvas renderer entirely in the next release. Please let us know if you have issues when terminal.integrated.gpuAcceleration is set to both "on" or "off" . Debug JavaScript Debugger The JavaScript debugger now automatically looks for binaries that appear in the node_modules/.bin folder in the runtimeExecutable configuration. Now, it resolves them by name automatically. Notice in the following example that you can just reference mocha , without having to specify the full path to the binary. { "name": "Run Tests", "type": "node", "request": "launch", - "runtimeExecutable": "${workspaceFolder}/node_modules/.bin/mocha", - "windows": { - "runtimeExecutable": "${workspaceFolder}/node_modules/.bin/mocha.cmd" - }, + "runtimeExecutable": "mocha", } Languages Image previews in Markdown path completions VS Code's built-in Markdown tooling provides path completions for links and images in your Markdown. When completing a path to an image or video file, we now show a small preview directly in the completion details . This can help you find the image or video you're after more easily. Hover to preview images and videos in Markdown Want a quick preview of an image or video in some Markdown without opening the full Markdown preview ? Now you can hover over an image or video path to see a small preview of it: Improved Markdown header renaming Did you know that VS Code's built-in Markdown support lets you rename headers using F2 ? This is useful because it also automatically updates all links to that header . This iteration, we improved handling of renaming in cases where a Markdown file has duplicated headers. Consider the Markdown file: # Readme - [ Example 1 ]( #_example ) - [ Example 2 ]( #_example-1 ) ## Example ... ## Example ... The two ## Example headers have the same text but can each be linked to individually by using a unique ID ( #example and #example-1 ). Previously, if you renamed the first ## Example header to ## First Example , the #example link would be correctly changed to #first-example but the #example-1 link would not be changed. However, #example-1 is no longer a valid link after the rename because there are no longer duplicated ## Example headers. We now correctly handle this scenario. If you rename the first ## Example header to ## First Example in the document above for instance, the new document will be: # Readme - [ Example 1 ]( #_first-example ) - [ Example 2 ]( #_example ) ## First Example ... ## Example ... Notice how both links have now been automatically updated, so that they both remain valid! Remote Development The Remote Development extensions , allow you to use a Dev Container , remote machine via SSH or Remote Tunnels , or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. Highlights include: Connect to WSL over SSH You can learn more about these features in the Remote Development release notes . Contributions to extensions GitHub Copilot Terminal inline chat Terminal inline chat is now the default experience in the terminal. Use the ⌘I (Windows, Linux Ctrl+I ) keyboard shortcut when the terminal is focused to bring it up. The terminal inline chat uses the @terminal chat participant, which has context about the integrated terminal's shell and its contents. Once a command is suggested, use ⌘Enter (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Enter ) to run the command in the terminal or ⌥Enter (Windows, Linux Alt+Enter ) to insert the command into the terminal. The command can also be edited directly in Copilot's response before running it (currently Ctrl+down , Tab , Tab on Windows & Linux, Cmd+down , Tab , Tab on macOS). Copilot powered rename suggestions button Copilot-powered rename suggestions can now be triggered by using the sparkle icon in the rename control. Content Exclusions GitHub Copilot Content Exclusions is now supported in Copilot Chat for all Copilot for Business and Copilot Enterprise customers. Information on configuring content exclusions can be found on the GitHub Docs . When a file is excluded by content exclusions, Copilot Chat is unable to see the contents or the path of the file, and it's not used in generating an LLM suggestion. Preview: Generate in Notebook Editor We now support inserting new cells with inline chat activated automatically in the notebook editor. We show a Generate button on the notebook toolbar and the insert toolbar between cells, when the notebook.experimental.generate setting is set to true . It can also be triggered by pressing Cmd+I on macOS (or Ctrl+I on Windows/Linux), when the focus is on the notebook list or cell container. This feature can help simplify the process of generating code in new cells with the help of the language model. Python "Implement all inherited abstract classes" code action Working with abstract classes is now easier when using Pylance. When defining a new class that inherits from an abstract one, you can now use the Implement all inherited abstract classes code action to automatically implement all abstract methods and properties from the parent class: Theme: Catppuccin Macchiato (preview on vscode.dev ) New auto indentation setting Previously, Pylance's auto indentation behavior was controlled through the editor.formatOnType setting, which used to be problematic if you wanted to disable auto indentation, but enable format on type with other supported tools. To solve this problem, Pylance has its own setting to control its auto indentation behavior: python.analysis.autoIndent , which is enabled by default. Debugpy removed from the Python extension in favor of the Python Debugger extension Now that debugging functionality is handled by the Python Debugger extension, we have removed debugpy from the Python extension. As part of this change, "type": "python" and "type": "debugpy" specified in your launch.json file will both reference the path to the Python Debugger extension, requiring no changes needed to your launch.json files in order to run and debug effectively. Moving forward, we recommend using "type": "debugpy" as this directly corresponds to the Python Debugger extension. Socket disablement now possible during testing You can now run tests with socket disablement from the testing UI on the Python Testing Rewrite. This is made possible by a switch in the communication between the Python extension and the test run subprocess to now use named-pipes. Minor testing bugs updated Test view now displays projects using testscenarios with unittest and parameterized tests inside nested classes correctly. Additionally, the Test explorer now handles tests in workspaces with symlinks, specifically workspace roots that are children of symlink-ed paths, which is particularly helpful in WSL scenarios. Performance improvements with Pylance The Pylance team has been receiving feedback that Pylance's performance has degraded in the past few releases. We have made several smaller improvements in memory consumption and indexing performance to address various reported issues. However, for those who might still be experiencing performance issues with Pylance, we are kindly requesting for issues to be filed through the Pylance: Report Issue command from the Command Palette, ideally with logs, code samples and/or the packages that are installed in the working environment. Hex Editor The hex editor now has an insert mode, in addition to its longstanding "replace" mode. The insert mode enables new bytes to be added within and at the end of files, and it can be toggled using the Insert key or from the status bar. The hex editor now also shows the currently hovered byte in the status bar. GitHub Pull Requests There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests extension, which enables you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. New features include: Experimental conflict resolution for non-checked out PRs is available when enabled by the hidden setting "githubPullRequests.experimentalUpdateBranchWithGitHub": true . This feature enables you to resolve conflicts in a PR without checking out the branch locally. The feature is still experimental and will not work in all cases. There's an Accessibility Help Dialog that shows when Open Accessibility Help is triggered from the Pull Requests and Issues views. All review action buttons show in the Active Pull Request sidebar view when there's enough space. Review the changelog for the 0.88.0 release of the extension to learn about the other highlights. TypeScript File watching handled by VS Code core A new experimental setting typescript.tsserver.experimental.useVsCodeWatcher controls if the TS extension is using VS Code's core file watching support for file watching needs. TS makes extensive use of file watching, usually with their own node.js based implementation. By using VS Code's file watcher, watching should be more efficient, more reliable, and consume less resources. We plan to gradually enable this feature for users in May and monitor for regressions. Preview Features VS Code-native intellisense for PowerShell We've had a prototype for PowerShell intellisense inside the terminal for some time now, that we only recently got some more time to invest in polishing up. This is what it looks like: Currently, it triggers on the - character or when ctrl+space is pressed. To enable this feature, set "terminal.integrated.shellIntegration.suggestEnabled": true in your settings.json file (it won't show up in the settings UI currently). It's still early for this feature but we'd love to hear your feedback on it. Some of the bigger things we have planned for it are to make triggering it more reliable ( #211222 ), make the suggestions more consistent regardless of where the popup is triggered ( #211364 ), and bringing the experience as close to the editor intellisense experience as possible ( #211076 , #211194 ). Automatic Markdown link updates on paste Say, you're writing some Markdown documentation and you realize that one section of the doc actually belongs somewhere else. So, you copy and paste it over into another file. All good, right? Well if the copied text contained any relative path links, reference links, or images, then these will likely now be broken, and you'll have to fix them up manually. This can be a real pain, but thankfully the new Update Links on Paste is here to help! To enable this functionality, just set "markdown.experimental.updateLinksOnPaste": true . Once enabled, when you copy and paste text between Markdown files in the current editor, VS Code automatically fixes all relative path links, reference links, and all images/videos with relative paths. After pasting, if you realize that you instead want to insert the exact text you copied, you can use the paste control to switch back to normal copy/paste behavior. Support for TypeScript 5.5 We now support the TypeScript 5.5 beta. Check out the TypeScript 5.5 beta blog post and iteration plan for details on this release. Editor highlights include: Syntax checks for regular expressions. File watching improvements. To start using the TypeScript 5.5 beta, install the TypeScript Nightly extension . Please share feedback and let us know if you run into any bugs with TypeScript 5.5. API Improved support for language features in comment input editors When writing a new comment, VS Code creates a stripped down text editor, which is backed by a TextDocument , just like the main editors in VS Code are. This iteration, we've enabled some additional API features in these comment text editors. This includes: Support for workspace edits. Support for diagnostics. Support for the paste-as proposed API. Comment text documents can be identified by a URI that has the comment scheme. We're looking forward to seeing what extensions build with this new functionality! Finalized Window Activity API The window activity API has been finalized. This API provides a simple additional WindowState.active boolean that extensions can use to determine if the window has recently been interacted with. vscode . window . onDidChangeWindowState ( e => console . log ( 'Is the user active?' , e . active )); Proposed APIs Accessibility Help Dialog for a view An Accessibility Help Dialog can be added for any extension-contributed view via the accessibilityHelpContent property. With focus in the view, screen reader users hear a hint to open the dialog ( ⌥F1 (Windows Alt+F1 , Linux Shift+Alt+F1 ) ), which contains an overview and helpful commands. This API is used by the GitHub Pull Request extension's Issues and PR views. Language model and Chat API The language model namespace ( vscode.lm ) exports new functions to retrieve language model information and to count tokens for a given string. Those are getLanguageModelInformation and computeTokenLength respectively. You should use these functions to build prompts that are within the limits of a language model. Note : inline chat is now powered by the upcoming chat participants API. This also means registerInteractiveEditorSessionProvider is deprecated and will be removed very soon. Updated document paste proposal We've continued iterating on the document paste proposed API . This API enables extensions to hook into copy/paste operations in text documents. Notable changes to the API include: A new resolveDocumentPasteEdit method, which fills in the edit on a paste operation. This should be used if computing the edit takes a long time as it is only called when the paste edit actually needs to be applied. All paste operations now are identified by a DocumentDropOrPasteEditKind . This works much like the existing CodeActionKind and is used in keybindings and settings for paste operations. The document paste extension sample includes all the latest API changes, so you can test out the API. Be sure to share feedback on the changes and overall API design. Hover Verbosity Level This iteration we have added a new proposed API to contract/expand hovers, which is called editorHoverVerbosityLevel . It introduces a new type called the VerboseHover , which has two boolean fields: canIncreaseHoverVerbosity and canDecreaseHoverVerbosity , which signal that a hover verbosity can be increased or decreased. If one of them is set to true, the hover is displayed with + and - icons, which can be used to increase/decrease the hover verbosity. The proposed API also introduces a new signature for the provideHover method, which takes an additional parameter of type HoverContext . When a hover verbosity request is sent by the user, the hover context is populated with the previous hover, as well as a HoverVerbosityAction , which indicates whether the user would like to increase or decrease the verbosity. preserveFocus on Extension-triggered TestRuns There is a proposal for a preserveFocus boolean on test run requests triggered by extensions. Previously, test runs triggered from extension APIs never caused the focus to move into the Test Results view, requiring some extensions to reinvent the wheel to maintain user experience compatibility. This new option can be set on TestRunRequest s, to ask the editor to move focus as if the run was triggered from in-editor. Notable fixes 209917 Aux window: restore maximised state (Linux, Windows) Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @RedCMD (RedCMD) @starball5 (starball) @ArturoDent (ArturoDent) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @4-tel : fix: searching for lines in debug console that start with "!" #174146 PR #210178 @CareyJWilliams (Carey Williams) : Fix task template writes to an empty tasks.json PR #210675 @cpendery (Chapman Pendery) fix: bundling error makes terminal suggestions fail PR #208822 feat: add git-bash support to shell integration PR #208960 fix: improve terminal marker placements on windows PR #209136 fix: terminal suggestions should hide modal when no completions exist PR #210289 fix: split fails in git bash PR #210513 @Ditoo29 (Diogo Pinto) : fix: serialization of newline characters PR #209703 @frankli0324 (Frank) : disable corepack auto pin feature when executing npm view PR #210601 @g-plane (Pig Fang) : Auto close Git multi-diff editor when all files staged or comitted PR #210327 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) Improve descriptions of workbench.activityBar.iconClickBehavior and workbench.activityBar.location settings PR #210574 Clear Activity Bar icon badge correctly (fix #210640) PR #210645 @grgar (George Garside) Don't use window.customTitleBarVisibility configuration on web PR #209162 Fix color picker command title PR #210349 Move cmd start escape to end of prompt PR #210443 @hsfzxjy (Xie Jingyi) : Logging navigible container events for debug PR #209357 @jswillard (John Willard) : Show custom label in quick open PR #209681 @marvinthepa (Martin Sander) : Middle-click paste in terminal PR #136633 @mmastrac (Matt Mastracci) : Add windowOptions to xtermTerminal to allow ESC [18t to work PR #209310 @nopeless (nopeless) : fix: make cmd local in shell integration bash file PR #208364 @pagict (Premium) : feat. add a menu item 'expand-select' to expand subtree in search view PR #206033 @pisv (Vladimir Piskarev) : Fix incorrect typings in OpenJsDocLinkCommand_Args PR #209872 @qirong77 : Fix missing class in inlinesuggest toolbar in Monaco-Editor causing CSS variables to be ineffective PR #207582 @r-sargento (Rafael Sargento) : Fix #201247 (Integrated Terminal does not set the environment variables from default profile) PR #209711 @ScriptBloom (alviner) : fix: minimap section header display uncompletely on first load:#209603 PR #209605 @sheetalkamat (Sheetal Nandi) : Use vscode watches for tsserver PR #193848 @telamon (Tony Ivanov) : Fixed #114425 prevent mime pollution on install PR #209510 @timorthi (Timothy Ng) : Re-render sticky scroll when line numbers display mode is changed PR #210815 @WardenGnaw (Andrew Wang) : Add 'noDebug' for selectAndStartDebugging command PR #209893 @zWingz (zWing) : fix: unexpected error when execCommand workbench.extensions.installExtension PR #210135 @ale-dg : continuously provide feedbacks and logs to help us diagnose multiple performance issues in the notebook editor and jupyter. Contributions to vscode-css-languageservice : @liaoyinglong (vigoss) : support nested @container PR #390 Contributions to vscode-emmet-helper : @nurbek0298 (Nurbek Ibraev) Add support for markup attributes in vue PR #92 2.9.3 PR #93 Contributions to vscode-eslint : @hyoban (Stephen Zhou) : fix: add json, jsonc to eslint.probe 's default options PR #1830 Contributions to vscode-hexeditor : @tomilho (Tomás Silva) Edit mode and input byte insertion PR #503 Fix: duplicate saving and stale webview. PR #513 @veger (Maarten Bezemer) : Fix swapped entries PR #515 Contributions to vscode-json-languageservice : @michaeltlombardi (Mikey Lombardi (He/Him)) : Ensure parser uses errorMessage for minContains/maxContains PR #229 Contributions to vscode-languageserver-node : @werat (Andy Hippo) : Don't crash when unregistering a feature that doesn't exist PR #1460 Contributions to vscode-python-debugger : @DavidArchibald (David Archibald) : Fix debugger attach to process when running on WSL PR #267 Contributions to vscode-vsce : @yutotnh (yutotnh) : feat: ignore .git generated by git worktree add PR #943 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @asukaminato0721 (Asuka Minato) : add 2 lsp PR #1918 @MariaSolOs (Maria José Solano) : Add markup diagnostic message clarification PR #1917 @practicalli-johnny (Practicalli Johnny) : servers: update clojure-lsp repo and maintainer PR #1921 @sz3lbi (szelbi) : add SAP CDS server PR #1924 @unvalley (unvalley) : docs: add biome to lsp servers PR #1923 @Wilfred (Wilfred Hughes) : Fix typo in RequestCancelled doc comment PR #1922 Contributions to monaco-editor : @timotheeguerin (Timothee Guerin) : Add support for TypeSpec language PR #4450 On this page there are 15 sections On this page Accessibility Workbench Source Control Notebooks Search Terminal Debug Languages Remote Development Contributions to extensions Preview Features API Proposed APIs Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/Download | Download Visual Studio Code - Mac, Linux, Windows Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Download Visual Studio Code Free and built on open source. Integrated Git, debugging and extensions. Windows Windows 10, 11 User Installer x64 Arm64 System Installer x64 Arm64 .zip x64 Arm64 CLI x64 Arm64 .deb Debian, Ubuntu .rpm Red Hat, Fedora, SUSE .deb x64 Arm32 Arm64 .rpm x64 Arm32 Arm64 .tar.gz x64 Arm32 Arm64 Snap Snap Store CLI x64 Arm32 Arm64 Mac macOS 11.0+ .zip Intel chip Apple silicon Universal CLI Intel chip Apple silicon By downloading and using Visual Studio Code, you agree to the license terms and privacy statement . Want new features sooner? Get the Insiders build instead. Use vscode.dev for quick edits online! GitHub, Azure Repos, and local files. Get previous versions Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://www.linkedin.com/legal/privacy-policy?trk=d_checkpoint_lg_consumer_login_ft_privacy_policy#lithograph-app | LinkedIn Privacy Policy Skip to main content User Agreement Summary of User Agreement Privacy Policy Professional Community Policies Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Regional Info EU Notice California Privacy Disclosure U.S. State Privacy Laws User Agreement Summary of User Agreement Privacy Policy Professional Community Policies Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Regional Info EU Notice California Privacy Disclosure U.S. State Privacy Laws Privacy Policy Effective November 3, 2025 Your Privacy Matters LinkedIn’s mission is to connect the world’s professionals to allow them to be more productive and successful. Central to this mission is our commitment to be transparent about the data we collect about you, how it is used and with whom it is shared. This Privacy Policy applies when you use our Services (described below). We offer our users choices about the data we collect, use and share as described in this Privacy Policy, Cookie Policy , Settings and our Help Center. Key Terms Choices Settings are available to Members of LinkedIn and Visitors are provided separate controls. Learn More . Table of Contents Data We Collect How We Use Your Data How We Share Information Your Choices and Obligations Other Important Information Introduction We are a social network and online platform for professionals. People use our Services to find and be found for business opportunities, to connect with others and find information. Our Privacy Policy applies to any Member or Visitor to our Services. Our registered users (“Members”) share their professional identities, engage with their network, exchange knowledge and professional insights, post and view relevant content, learn and develop skills, and find business and career opportunities. Content and data on some of our Services is viewable to non-Members (“Visitors”). We use the term “Designated Countries” to refer to countries in the European Union (EU), European Economic Area (EEA), and Switzerland. Members and Visitors located in the Designated Countries or the UK can review additional information in our European Regional Privacy Notice . Services This Privacy Policy, including our Cookie Policy applies to your use of our Services. This Privacy Policy applies to LinkedIn.com, LinkedIn-branded apps, and other LinkedIn-branded sites, apps, communications and services offered by LinkedIn (“Services”), including off-site Services, such as our ad services and the “Apply with LinkedIn” and “Share with LinkedIn” plugins, but excluding services that state that they are offered under a different privacy policy. For California residents, additional disclosures required by California law may be found in our California Privacy Disclosure . Data Controllers and Contracting Parties If you are in the “Designated Countries”, LinkedIn Ireland Unlimited Company (“LinkedIn Ireland”) will be the controller of your personal data provided to, or collected by or for, or processed in connection with our Services. If you are outside of the Designated Countries, LinkedIn Corporation will be the controller of (or business responsible for) your personal data provided to, or collected by or for, or processed in connection with our Services. As a Visitor or Member of our Services, the collection, use and sharing of your personal data is subject to this Privacy Policy and other documents referenced in this Privacy Policy, as well as updates. Change Changes to the Privacy Policy apply to your use of our Services after the “effective date.” LinkedIn (“we” or “us”) can modify this Privacy Policy, and if we make material changes to it, we will provide notice through our Services, or by other means, to provide you the opportunity to review the changes before they become effective. If you object to any changes, you may close your account. You acknowledge that your continued use of our Services after we publish or send a notice about our changes to this Privacy Policy means that the collection, use and sharing of your personal data is subject to the updated Privacy Policy, as of its effective date. 1. Data We Collect 1.1 Data You Provide To Us You provide data to create an account with us. Registration To create an account you need to provide data including your name, email address and/or mobile number, general location (e.g., city), and a password. If you register for a premium Service, you will need to provide payment (e.g., credit card) and billing information. You create your LinkedIn profile (a complete profile helps you get the most from our Services). Profile You have choices about the information on your profile, such as your education, work experience, skills, photo, city or area , endorsements, and optional verifications of information on your profile (such as verifications of your identity or workplace). You don’t have to provide additional information on your profile; however, profile information helps you to get more from our Services, including helping recruiters and business opportunities find you. It’s your choice whether to include sensitive information on your profile and to make that sensitive information public. Please do not post or add personal data to your profile that you would not want to be publicly available. You may give other data to us, such as by syncing your calendar. Posting and Uploading We collect personal data from you when you provide, post or upload it to our Services, such as when you fill out a form, (e.g., with demographic data or salary), respond to a survey, or submit a resume or fill out a job application on our Services. If you sync your calendars with our Services, we will collect your calendar meeting information to keep growing your network by suggesting connections for you and others, and by providing information about events, e.g. times, places, attendees and contacts. You don’t have to post or upload personal data; though if you don’t, it may limit your ability to grow and engage with your network over our Services. 1.2 Data From Others Others may post or write about you. Content and News You and others may post content that includes information about you (as part of articles, posts, comments, videos) on our Services. We also may collect public information about you, such as professional-related news and accomplishments, and make it available as part of our Services, including, as permitted by your settings, in notifications to others of mentions in the news . Others may sync their calendar with our Services Contact and Calendar Information We receive personal data (including contact information) about you when others import or sync their calendar with our Services, associate their contacts with Member profiles, scan and upload business cards, or send messages using our Services (including invites or connection requests). If you or others opt-in to sync email accounts with our Services, we will also collect “email header” information that we can associate with Member profiles. Customers and partners may provide data to us. Partners We receive personal data (e.g., your job title and work email address) about you when you use the services of our customers and partners, such as employers or prospective employers and applicant tracking systems providing us job application data. Related Companies and Other Services We receive data about you when you use some of the other services provided by us or our Affiliates , including Microsoft. For example, you may choose to send us information about your contacts in Microsoft apps and services, such as Outlook, for improved professional networking activities on our Services or we may receive information from Microsoft about your engagement with their sites and services. 1.3 Service Use We log your visits and use of our Services, including mobile apps. We log usage data when you visit or otherwise use our Services, including our sites, app and platform technology, such as when you view or click on content (e.g., learning video) or ads (on or off our sites and apps), perform a search, install or update one of our mobile apps, share articles or apply for jobs. We use log-ins, cookies, device information and internet protocol (“IP”) addresses to identify you and log your use. 1.4 Cookies and Similar Technologies We collect data through cookies and similar technologies. As further described in our Cookie Policy , we use cookies and similar technologies (e.g., pixels and ad tags) to collect data (e.g., device IDs) to recognize you and your device(s) on, off and across different services and devices where you have engaged with our Services. We also allow some others to use cookies as described in our Cookie Policy. If you are outside the Designated Countries, we also collect (or rely on others, including Microsoft, who collect) information about your device where you have not engaged with our Services (e.g., ad ID, IP address, operating system and browser information) so we can provide our Members with relevant ads and better understand their effectiveness. Learn more . You can opt out from our use of data from cookies and similar technologies that track your behavior on the sites of others for ad targeting and other ad-related purposes. For Visitors, the controls are here . 1.5 Your Device and Location We receive data through cookies and similar technologies When you visit or leave our Services (including some plugins and our cookies or similar technology on the sites of others), we receive the URL of both the site you came from and the one you go to and the time of your visit. We also get information about your network and device (e.g., IP address, proxy server, operating system, web browser and add-ons, device identifier and features, cookie IDs and/or ISP, or your mobile carrier). If you use our Services from a mobile device, that device will send us data about your location based on your phone settings. We will ask you to opt-in before we use GPS or other tools to identify your precise location. 1.6 Communications If you communicate through our Services, we learn about that. We collect information about you when you communicate with others through our Services (e.g., when you send, receive, or engage with messages, events, or connection requests, including our marketing communications). This may include information that indicates who you are communicating with and when. We also use automated systems to support and protect our site. For example, we use such systems to suggest possible responses to messages and to manage or block content that violates our User Agreement or Professional Community Policies . 1.7 Workplace and School Provided Information When your organization (e.g., employer or school) buys a premium Service for you to use, they give us data about you. Others buying our Services for your use, such as your employer or your school, provide us with personal data about you and your eligibility to use the Services that they purchase for use by their workers, students or alumni. For example, we will get contact information for “ LinkedIn Page ” (formerly Company Page) administrators and for authorizing users of our premium Services, such as our recruiting, sales or learning products. 1.8 Sites and Services of Others We get data when you visit sites that include our ads, cookies or plugins or when you log-in to others’ services with your LinkedIn account. We receive information about your visits and interaction with services provided by others when you log-in with LinkedIn or visit others’ services that include some of our plugins (such as “Apply with LinkedIn”) or our ads, cookies or similar technologies. 1.9 Other We are improving our Services, which means we get new data and create new ways to use data. Our Services are dynamic, and we often introduce new features, which may require the collection of new information. If we collect materially different personal data or materially change how we collect, use or share your data, we will notify you and may also modify this Privacy Policy. Key Terms Affiliates Affiliates are companies controlling, controlled by or under common control with us, including, for example, LinkedIn Ireland, LinkedIn Corporation, LinkedIn Singapore and Microsoft Corporation or any of its subsidiaries (e.g., GitHub, Inc.). 2. How We Use Your Data We use your data to provide, support, personalize and develop our Services. How we use your personal data will depend on which Services you use, how you use those Services and the choices you make in your settings . We may use your personal data to improve, develop, and provide products and Services, develop and train artificial intelligence (AI) models, develop, provide, and personalize our Services, and gain insights with the help of AI, automated systems, and inferences, so that our Services can be more relevant and useful to you and others. You can review LinkedIn's Responsible AI principles here and learn more about our approach to generative AI here . Learn more about the inferences we may make, including as to your age and gender and how we use them. 2.1 Services Our Services help you connect with others, find and be found for work and business opportunities, stay informed, get training and be more productive. We use your data to authorize access to our Services and honor your settings. Stay Connected Our Services allow you to stay in touch and up to date with colleagues, partners, clients, and other professional contacts. To do so, you can “connect” with the professionals who you choose, and who also wish to “connect” with you. Subject to your and their settings , when you connect with other Members, you will be able to search each others’ connections in order to exchange professional opportunities. We use data about you (such as your profile, profiles you have viewed or data provided through address book uploads or partner integrations) to help others find your profile, suggest connections for you and others (e.g. Members who share your contacts or job experiences) and enable you to invite others to become a Member and connect with you. You can also opt-in to allow us to use your precise location or proximity to others for certain tasks (e.g. to suggest other nearby Members for you to connect with, calculate the commute to a new job, or notify your connections that you are at a professional event). It is your choice whether to invite someone to our Services, send a connection request, or allow another Member to become your connection. When you invite someone to connect with you, your invitation will include your network and basic profile information (e.g., name, profile photo, job title, region). We will send invitation reminders to the person you invited. You can choose whether or not to share your own list of connections with your connections. Visitors have choices about how we use their data. Stay Informed Our Services allow you to stay informed about news, events and ideas regarding professional topics you care about, and from professionals you respect. Our Services also allow you to improve your professional skills, or learn new ones. We use the data we have about you (e.g., data you provide, data we collect from your engagement with our Services and inferences we make from the data we have about you), to personalize our Services for you, such as by recommending or ranking relevant content and conversations on our Services. We also use the data we have about you to suggest skills you could add to your profile and skills that you might need to pursue your next opportunity. So, if you let us know that you are interested in a new skill (e.g., by watching a learning video), we will use this information to personalize content in your feed, suggest that you follow certain Members on our site, or suggest related learning content to help you towards that new skill. We use your content, activity and other data, including your name and photo, to provide notices to your network and others. For example, subject to your settings , we may notify others that you have updated your profile, posted content, took a social action , used a feature, made new connections or were mentioned in the news . Career Our Services allow you to explore careers, evaluate educational opportunities, and seek out, and be found for, career opportunities. Your profile can be found by those looking to hire (for a job or a specific task ) or be hired by you. We will use your data to recommend jobs and show you and others relevant professional contacts (e.g., who work at a company, in an industry, function or location or have certain skills and connections). You can signal that you are interested in changing jobs and share information with recruiters. We will use your data to recommend jobs to you and you to recruiters. We may use automated systems to provide content and recommendations to help make our Services more relevant to our Members, Visitors and customers. Keeping your profile accurate and up-to-date may help you better connect to others and to opportunities through our Services. Productivity Our Services allow you to collaborate with colleagues, search for potential clients, customers, partners and others to do business with. Our Services allow you to communicate with other Members and schedule and prepare meetings with them. If your settings allow, we scan messages to provide “bots” or similar tools that facilitate tasks such as scheduling meetings, drafting responses, summarizing messages or recommending next steps. Learn more . 2.2 Premium Services Our premium Services help paying users to search for and contact Members through our Services, such as searching for and contacting job candidates, sales leads and co-workers, manage talent and promote content. We sell premium Services that provide our customers and subscribers with customized-search functionality and tools (including messaging and activity alerts) as part of our talent, marketing and sales solutions. Customers can export limited information from your profile, such as name, headline, current company, current title, and general location (e.g., Dublin), such as to manage sales leads or talent, unless you opt-out . We do not provide contact information to customers as part of these premium Services without your consent. Premium Services customers can store information they have about you in our premium Services, such as a resume or contact information or sales history. The data stored about you by these customers is subject to the policies of those customers. Other enterprise Services and features that use your data include TeamLink and LinkedIn Pages (e.g., content analytics and followers). 2.3 Communications We contact you and enable communications between Members. We offer settings to control what messages you receive and how often you receive some types of messages. We will contact you through email, mobile phone, notices posted on our websites or apps, messages to your LinkedIn inbox, and other ways through our Services, including text messages and push notifications. We will send you messages about the availability of our Services, security, or other service-related issues. We also send messages about how to use our Services, network updates, reminders, job suggestions and promotional messages from us and our partners. You may change your communication preferences at any time. Please be aware that you cannot opt out of receiving service messages from us, including security and legal notices. We also enable communications between you and others through our Services, including for example invitations , InMail , groups and messages between connections. 2.4 Advertising We serve you tailored ads both on and off our Services. We offer you choices regarding personalized ads, but you cannot opt-out of seeing non-personalized ads. We target (and measure the performance of) ads to Members, Visitors and others both on and off our Services directly or through a variety of partners, using the following data, whether separately or combined: Data collected by advertising technologies on and off our Services using pixels, ad tags (e.g., when an advertiser installs a LinkedIn tag on their website), cookies, and other device identifiers; Member-provided information (e.g., profile, contact information, title and industry); Data from your use of our Services (e.g., search history, feed, content you read, who you follow or is following you, connections, groups participation, page visits, videos you watch, clicking on an ad, etc.), including as described in Section 1.3; Information from advertising partners , vendors and publishers ; and Information inferred from data described above (e.g., using job titles from a profile to infer industry, seniority, and compensation bracket; using graduation dates to infer age or using first names or pronoun usage to infer gender; using your feed activity to infer your interests; or using device data to recognize you as a Member). Learn more about the inferences we make and how they may be used for advertising. Learn more about the ad technologies we use and our advertising services and partners. You can learn more about our compliance with laws in the Designated Countries or the UK in our European Regional Privacy Notice . We will show you ads called sponsored content which look similar to non-sponsored content, except that they are labeled as advertising (e.g., as “ad” or “sponsored”). If you take a social action (such as like, comment or share) on these ads, your action is associated with your name and viewable by others, including the advertiser. Subject to your settings , if you take a social action on the LinkedIn Services, that action may be mentioned with related ads. For example, when you like a company we may include your name and photo when their sponsored content is shown. Ad Choices You have choices regarding our uses of certain categories of data to show you more relevant ads. Member settings can be found here . For Visitors, the setting is here . Info to Ad Providers We do not share your personal data with any non-Affiliated third-party advertisers or ad networks except for: (i) hashed IDs or device identifiers (to the extent they are personal data in some countries); (ii) with your separate permission (e.g., in a lead generation form) or (iii) data already visible to any users of the Services (e.g., profile). However, if you view or click on an ad on or off our Services, the ad provider will get a signal that someone visited the page that displayed the ad, and they may, through the use of mechanisms such as cookies, determine it is you. Advertising partners can associate personal data collected by the advertiser directly from you with hashed IDs or device identifiers received from us. We seek to contractually require such advertising partners to obtain your explicit, opt-in consent before doing so where legally required, and in such instances, we take steps to ensure that consent has been provided before processing data from them. 2.5 Marketing We promote our Services to you and others. In addition to advertising our Services, we use Members’ data and content for invitations and communications promoting membership and network growth, engagement and our Services, such as by showing your connections that you have used a feature on our Services. 2.6 Developing Services and Research We develop our Services and conduct research Service Development We use data, including public feedback, to conduct research and development for our Services in order to provide you and others with a better, more intuitive and personalized experience, drive membership growth and engagement on our Services, and help connect professionals to each other and to economic opportunity. Other Research We seek to create economic opportunity for Members of the global workforce and to help them be more productive and successful. We use the personal data available to us to research social, economic and workplace trends, such as jobs availability and skills needed for these jobs and policies that help bridge the gap in various industries and geographic areas. In some cases, we work with trusted third parties to perform this research, under controls that are designed to protect your privacy. We may also make public data available to researchers to enable assessment of the safety and legal compliance of our Services. We publish or allow others to publish economic insights, presented as aggregated data rather than personal data. Surveys Polls and surveys are conducted by us and others through our Services. You are not obligated to respond to polls or surveys, and you have choices about the information you provide. You may opt-out of survey invitations. 2.7 Customer Support We use data to help you and fix problems. We use data (which can include your communications) to investigate, respond to and resolve complaints and for Service issues (e.g., bugs). 2.8 Insights That Do Not Identify You We use data to generate insights that do not identify you. We use your data to perform analytics to produce and share insights that do not identify you. For example, we may use your data to generate statistics about our Members, their profession or industry, to calculate ad impressions served or clicked on (e.g., for basic business reporting to support billing and budget management or, subject to your settings , for reports to advertisers who may use them to inform their advertising campaigns), to show Members' information about engagement with a post or LinkedIn Page , to publish visitor demographics for a Service or create demographic workforce insights, or to understand usage of our services. 2.9 Security and Investigations We use data for security, fraud prevention and investigations. We and our Affiliates, including Microsoft, may use your data (including your communications) for security purposes or to prevent or investigate possible fraud or other violations of the law, our User Agreement and/or attempts to harm our Members, Visitors, company, Affiliates, or others. Key Terms Social Action E.g. like, comment, follow, share Partners Partners include ad networks, exchanges and others 3. How We Share Information 3.1 Our Services Any data that you include on your profile and any content you post or social action (e.g., likes, follows, comments, shares) you take on our Services will be seen by others, consistent with your settings. Profile Your profile is fully visible to all Members and customers of our Services. Subject to your settings , it can also be visible to others on or off of our Services (e.g., Visitors to our Services or users of third-party search tools). As detailed in our Help Center , your settings, degree of connection with the viewing Member, the subscriptions they may have, their usage of our Services , access channels and search types (e.g., by name or by keyword) impact the availability of your profile and whether they can view certain fields in your profile. Posts, Likes, Follows, Comments, Messages Our Services allow viewing and sharing information including through posts, likes, follows and comments. When you share an article or a post (e.g., an update, image, video or article) publicly it can be viewed by everyone and re-shared anywhere (subject to your settings ). Members, Visitors and others will be able to find and see your publicly-shared content, including your name (and photo if you have provided one). In a group , posts are visible to others according to group type. For example, posts in private groups are visible to others in the group and posts in public groups are visible publicly. Your membership in groups is public and part of your profile, but you can change visibility in your settings . Any information you share through companies’ or other organizations’ pages on our Services will be viewable by those organizations and others who view those pages' content. When you follow a person or organization, you are visible to others and that “page owner” as a follower. We let senders know when you act on their message, subject to your settings where applicable. Subject to your settings , we let a Member know when you view their profile. We also give you choices about letting organizations know when you've viewed their Page. When you like or re-share or comment on another’s content (including ads), others will be able to view these “social actions” and associate it with you (e.g., your name, profile and photo if you provided it). Your employer can see how you use Services they provided for your work (e.g. as a recruiter or sales agent) and related information. We will not show them your job searches or personal messages. Enterprise Accounts Your employer may offer you access to our enterprise Services such as Recruiter, Sales Navigator, LinkedIn Learning or our advertising Campaign Manager. Your employer can review and manage your use of such enterprise Services. Depending on the enterprise Service, before you use such Service, we will ask for permission to share with your employer relevant data from your profile or use of our non-enterprise Services. For example, users of Sales Navigator will be asked to share their “social selling index”, a score calculated in part based on their personal account activity. We understand that certain activities such as job hunting and personal messages are sensitive, and so we do not share those with your employer unless you choose to share it with them through our Services (for example, by applying for a new position in the same company or mentioning your job hunting in a message to a co-worker through our Services). Subject to your settings , when you use workplace tools and services (e.g., interactive employee directory tools) certain of your data may also be made available to your employer or be connected with information we receive from your employer to enable these tools and services. 3.2 Communication Archival Regulated Members may need to store communications outside of our Service. Some Members (or their employers) need, for legal or professional compliance, to archive their communications and social media activity, and will use services of others to provide these archival services. We enable archiving of messages by and to those Members outside of our Services. For example, a financial advisor needs to archive communications with her clients through our Services in order to maintain her professional financial advisor license. 3.3 Others’ Services You may link your account with others’ services so that they can look up your contacts’ profiles, post your shares on such platforms, or enable you to start conversations with your connections on such platforms. Excerpts from your profile will also appear on the services of others. Subject to your settings , other services may look up your profile. When you opt to link your account with other services, personal data (e.g., your name, title, and company) will become available to them. The sharing and use of that personal data will be described in, or linked to, a consent screen when you opt to link the accounts. For example, you may link your Twitter or WeChat account to share content from our Services into these other services, or your email provider may give you the option to upload your LinkedIn contacts into its own service. Third-party services have their own privacy policies, and you may be giving them permission to use your data in ways we would not. You may revoke the link with such accounts. The information you make available to others in our Services (e.g., information from your profile, your posts, your engagement with the posts, or message to Pages) may be available to them on other services . For example, search tools, mail and calendar applications, or talent and lead managers may show a user limited profile data (subject to your settings ), and social media management tools or other platforms may display your posts. The information retained on these services may not reflect updates you make on LinkedIn. 3.4 Related Services We share your data across our different Services and LinkedIn affiliated entities. We will share your personal data with our Affiliates to provide and develop our Services. For example, we may refer a query to Bing in some instances, such as where you'd benefit from a more up to date response in a chat experience. Subject to our European Regional Privacy Notice , we may also share with our Affiliates, including Microsoft, your (1) publicly-shared content (such as your public LinkedIn posts) to provide or develop their services and (2) personal data to improve, provide or develop their advertising services. Where allowed , we may combine information internally across the different Services covered by this Privacy Policy to help our Services be more relevant and useful to you and others. For example, we may personalize your feed or job recommendations based on your learning history. 3.5 Service Providers We may use others to help us with our Services. We use others to help us provide our Services (e.g., maintenance, analysis, audit, payments, fraud detection, customer support, marketing and development). They will have access to your information (e.g., the contents of a customer support request) as reasonably necessary to perform these tasks on our behalf and are obligated not to disclose or use it for other purposes. If you purchase a Service from us, we may use a payments service provider who may separately collect information about you (e.g., for fraud prevention or to comply with legal obligations). 3.6 Legal Disclosures We may need to share your data when we believe it’s required by law or to help protect the rights and safety of you, us or others. It is possible that we will need to disclose information about you when required by law, subpoena, or other legal process or if we have a good faith belief that disclosure is reasonably necessary to (1) investigate, prevent or take action regarding suspected or actual illegal activities or to assist government enforcement agencies; (2) enforce our agreements with you; (3) investigate and defend ourselves against any third-party claims or allegations; (4) protect the security or integrity of our Services or the products or services of our Affiliates (such as by sharing with companies facing similar threats); or (5) exercise or protect the rights and safety of LinkedIn, our Members, personnel or others. We attempt to notify Members about legal demands for their personal data when appropriate in our judgment, unless prohibited by law or court order or when the request is an emergency. We may dispute such demands when we believe, in our discretion, that the requests are overbroad, vague or lack proper authority, but we do not promise to challenge every demand. To learn more see our Data Request Guidelines and Transparency Report . 3.7 Change in Control or Sale We may share your data when our business is sold to others, but it must continue to be used in accordance with this Privacy Policy. We can also share your personal data as part of a sale, merger or change in control, or in preparation for any of these events. Any other entity which buys us or part of our business will have the right to continue to use your data, but only in the manner set out in this Privacy Policy unless you agree otherwise. 4. Your Choices & Obligations 4.1 Data Retention We keep most of your personal data for as long as your account is open. We generally retain your personal data as long as you keep your account open or as needed to provide you Services. This includes data you or others provided to us and data generated or inferred from your use of our Services. Even if you only use our Services when looking for a new job every few years, we will retain your information and keep your profile open, unless you close your account. In some cases we choose to retain certain information (e.g., insights about Services use) in a depersonalized or aggregated form. 4.2 Rights to Access and Control Your Personal Data You can access or delete your personal data. You have many choices about how your data is collected, used and shared. We provide many choices about the collection, use and sharing of your data, from deleting or correcting data you include in your profile and controlling the visibility of your posts to advertising opt-outs and communication controls. We offer you settings to control and manage the personal data we have about you. For personal data that we have about you, you can: Delete Data : You can ask us to erase or delete all or some of your personal data (e.g., if it is no longer necessary to provide Services to you). Change or Correct Data : You can edit some of your personal data through your account. You can also ask us to change, update or fix your data in certain cases, particularly if it’s inaccurate. Object to, or Limit or Restrict, Use of Data : You can ask us to stop using all or some of your personal data (e.g., if we have no legal right to keep using it) or to limit our use of it (e.g., if your personal data is inaccurate or unlawfully held). Right to Access and/or Take Your Data : You can ask us for a copy of your personal data and can ask for a copy of personal data you provided in machine readable form. Visitors can learn more about how to make these requests here . You may also contact us using the contact information below, and we will consider your request in accordance with applicable laws. Residents in the Designated Countries and the UK , and other regions , may have additional rights under their laws. 4.3 Account Closure We keep some of your data even after you close your account. If you choose to close your LinkedIn account, your personal data will generally stop being visible to others on our Services within 24 hours. We generally delete closed account information within 30 days of account closure, except as noted below. We retain your personal data even after you have closed your account if reasonably necessary to comply with our legal obligations (including law enforcement requests), meet regulatory requirements, resolve disputes, maintain security, prevent fraud and abuse (e.g., if we have restricted your account for breach of our Professional Community Policies ), enforce our User Agreement, or fulfill your request to "unsubscribe" from further messages from us. We will retain de-personalized information after your account has been closed. Information you have shared with others (e.g., through InMail, updates or group posts) will remain visible after you close your account or delete the information from your own profile or mailbox, and we do not control data that other Members have copied out of our Services. Groups content and ratings or review content associated with closed accounts will show an unknown user as the source. Your profile may continue to be displayed in the services of others (e.g., search tools) until they refresh their cache. 5. Other Important Information 5.1. Security We monitor for and try to prevent security breaches. Please use the security features available through our Services. We implement security safeguards designed to protect your data, such as HTTPS. We regularly monitor our systems for possible vulnerabilities and attacks. However, we cannot warrant the security of any information that you send us. There is no guarantee that data may not be accessed, disclosed, altered, or destroyed by breach of any of our physical, technical, or managerial safeguards. 5.2. Cross-Border Data Transfers We store and use your data outside your country. We process data both inside and outside of the United States and rely on legally-provided mechanisms to lawfully transfer data across borders. Learn more . Countries where we process data may have laws which are different from, and potentially not as protective as, the laws of your own country. 5.3 Lawful Bases for Processing We have lawful bases to collect, use and share data about you. You have choices about our use of your data. At any time, you can withdraw consent you have provided by going to settings. We will only collect and process personal data about you where we have lawful bases. Lawful bases include consent (where you have given consent), contract (where processing is necessary for the performance of a contract with you (e.g., to deliver the LinkedIn Services you have requested) and “legitimate interests.” Learn more . Where we rely on your consent to process personal data, you have the right to withdraw or decline your consent at any time and where we rely on legitimate interests, you have the right to object. Learn More . If you have any questions about the lawful bases upon which we collect and use your personal data, please contact our Data Protection Officer here . If you're located in one of the Designated Countries or the UK, you can learn more about our lawful bases for processing in our European Regional Privacy Notice . 5.4. Direct Marketing and Do Not Track Signals Our statements regarding direct marketing and “do not track” signals. We currently do not share personal data with third parties for their direct marketing purposes without your permission. Learn more about this and about our response to “do not track” signals. 5.5. Contact Information You can contact us or use other options to resolve any complaints. If you have questions or complaints regarding this Policy, please first contact LinkedIn online. You can also reach us by physical mail . If contacting us does not resolve your complaint, you have more options . Residents in the Designated Countries and other regions may also have the right to contact our Data Protection Officer here . If this does not resolve your complaint, Residents in the Designated Countries and other regions may have more options under their laws. Key Terms Consent Where we process data based on consent, we will ask for your explicit consent. You may withdraw your consent at any time, but that will not affect the lawfulness of the processing of your personal data prior to such withdrawal. Where we rely on contract, we will ask that you agree to the processing of personal data that is necessary for entering into or performance of your contract with us. We will rely on legitimate interests as a basis for data processing where the processing of your data is not overridden by your interests or fundamental rights and freedoms. 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https://de.linkedin.com/company/gittower | Tower | LinkedIn Weiter zum Hauptinhalt LinkedIn Artikel Personen E-Learning Jobs Spiele Einloggen Jetzt anmelden Tower Softwareentwicklung A Better Way to Work With Git Folgen alle 14 Mitarbeiter:innen anzeigen Dieses Unternehmen melden Info Tower is a powerful Git client for macOS and Windows. More than 100,000 developers and designers use Tower to be more productive with Git: from Git beginners to Git experts. From indie developers and startups all the way to Fortune 500 companies. Download our 30-day free trial and experience a better way to work with Git! Website https://www.git-tower.com Externer Link zu Tower Branche Softwareentwicklung Größe 2–10 Beschäftigte Hauptsitz Schönefeld Art Privatunternehmen Gegründet 2010 Produkte Tower Git Client Tower is a powerful Git client for macOS and Windows and the tool of choice for over 100,000 developers and designers. It comes with an extensive set of features, helping you to become a confident Git user - no matter your level of expertise. Beginners get easy access to many advanced features, while experts will become more productive. Made a mistake - simply hit CMD+Z in Tower. Want to perform an Interactive Rebase - simply do it via drag and drop. Need to clone a repository from GitHub, Bitbucket, GitLab, or Azure Devops - it’s a single click. Tower also automates the boring stuff for you: fetching, stashing, updating Submodules… it’s all done automatically. Spend less time with version control and more writing code. Stop worrying about Git commands and finally start using Git’s powerful feature set - in a beautiful GUI that will make you more productive every single day. And it’s even free for students, teachers, and schools! Try it today! Orte Primär Schönefeld, 12529, DE Wegbeschreibung Beschäftigte von Tower Bruno Brito Filip Persson Sabine Kurrle Kai U Bißbort Alle Beschäftigten anzeigen Updates Tower 641 Follower:innen 2 Wochen Diesen Beitrag melden 🎅 Happy Holidays from Tower! 🎄 May you git a festive season full of memorable commits! ✌️ 10 Gefällt mir Kommentieren Teilen Tower 641 Follower:innen 1 Monat Diesen Beitrag melden BLACK FRIDAY IS HERE! 🖤 If you're looking for more deals, take a look at the https://saas.blackfriday website, which lists deals for nearly 40 top software brands — including yours truly, of course! ☺️ #blackfriday 4 Gefällt mir Kommentieren Teilen Tower 641 Follower:innen 1 Monat Diesen Beitrag melden With the rise of AI coding assistants like Claude Code, how can we maintain a clean and easy-to-follow Git history? Here's a guide to effective version control in the age of AI! https://lnkd.in/d7CdXb8u Version Control in the Age of AI: The Complete Guide git-tower.com 6 Gefällt mir Kommentieren Teilen Tower 641 Follower:innen 1 Monat Diesen Beitrag melden HELLO BLACK FRIDAY WEEK! 🖤 For a limited time, enjoy a 30% discount on the first year of your subscription to any Tower plan 🔥 This offer applies to new customers only. Learn more 👉 https://www.git-tower.com 4 Gefällt mir Kommentieren Teilen Tower 641 Follower:innen 1 Monat Diesen Beitrag melden Our open-source project git-flow-next has recently reached 100 stars! To celebrate, here's a cheat sheet for easy access to all the most important commands! It is also available as a PDF on our website 😉 Website 👉 https://git-flow.sh/ GitHub repo 👉 https://lnkd.in/dtSzNRd5 5 Gefällt mir Kommentieren Teilen Tower 641 Follower:innen 2 Monate Diesen Beitrag melden We have added a new "Workflows" section to git-flow-next 😎 Here you'll find information about each available preset, enabling you to select the one that best suits your project. You can also create your own unique branching workflow! Check it out 👉 https://git-flow.sh 6 Gefällt mir Kommentieren Teilen Tower 641 Follower:innen 2 Monate Diesen Beitrag melden Tower 15 for Mac (currently in Beta) is fully compatible with macOS 26 Tahoe. This means we have some shiny new icons for you! 😉 5 Gefällt mir Kommentieren Teilen Tower 641 Follower:innen 2 Monate Diesen Beitrag melden Tower 15 for Mac is coming very soon and is fully compatible with macOS 26 Tahoe. It's already in beta, so if you'd like to give it a try, just switch to the "Beta" channel in "Preferences > Updates." More info 👉 https://lnkd.in/gz2GbtEi 5 Gefällt mir Kommentieren Teilen Tower 641 Follower:innen 2 Monate Diesen Beitrag melden Tower 15 for Mac, currently in Beta, makes it easy to visualize fully merged or stale branches 😏 This will help you keep your repositories tidy and uncluttered! 🤩 Learn more about this release 👉 https://lnkd.in/dizfwSra 2 Gefällt mir Kommentieren Teilen Tower 641 Follower:innen 2 Monate Diesen Beitrag melden Tower 10 for Windows, now in beta, introduces Graphite support! 🔥 With this update, you can manage your stacked branches and create Pull Requests without ever leaving our Git client. https://lnkd.in/diX-9ZGw Tower 10 for Windows — Introducing Graphite Support git-tower.com 4 Gefällt mir Kommentieren Teilen Einfach anmelden, damit Sie nichts verpassen. Personen von Tower finden, die Sie kennen Persönliche Jobempfehlungen erhalten Alle Updates, News und Artikel anzeigen Jetzt anmelden Ähnliche Seiten Adyntel Softwareentwicklung saas.group Technologie, Information und Internet Seattle, Washington All SaaS Emails IT-Dienstleistungen und IT-Beratung MyWorks Softwareentwicklung Fort Worth, Texas Seobility Softwareentwicklung ScraperAPI IT-Dienstleistungen und IT-Beratung Timebutler Personaldienstleistungen INFOnline GmbH IT und Services Schönefeld, Brandenburg DeployHQ Technologie, Information und Internet Las Vegas, Nevada Transloadit IT und Services Berlin, Berlin Mehr ähnliche Seiten anzeigen Weniger ähnliche Seiten anzeigen Jobs durchsuchen Entwickler-Jobs 21.496 freie Stellen Projektmanager-Jobs 15.641 freie Stellen Weitere Suchen Weitere Suchen Entwickler-Jobs LinkedIn © 2026 Info Barrierefreiheit Nutzervereinbarung Datenschutzrichtlinie Cookie-Richtlinie Copyright-Richtlinie Markenrichtlinine Einstellungen für Nichtmitglieder Community-Richtlinien العربية (Arabisch) বাংলা (Bengali) Čeština (Tschechisch) Dansk (Dänisch) Deutsch Ελανεκα (Griechisch) English (Englisch) Español (Spanisch) فارسی (Persisch) Suomi (Finnisch) Français (Französisch) हिंदी (Hindi) Magyar (Ungarisch) Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesisch) Italiano (Italienisch) עברית (Hebräisch) 日本語 (Japanisch) 한국어 (Koreanisch) मराठी (Marathi) Bahasa Malaysia (Malaysisch) Nederlands (Niederländisch) Norsk (Norwegisch) ਪੰਜਾਬੀ (Punjabi) Polski (Polnisch) Português (Portugiesisch) Română (Rumänisch) Русский (Russisch) Svenska (Schwedisch) తెలుగు (Telugu) ภาษาไทย (Thai) Tagalog (Tagalog) Türkçe (Türkisch) Українська (Ukrainisch) Tiếng Việt (Vietnamesisch) 简体中文 (Chinesisch vereinfacht) 正體中文 (Chinesisch traditionell) Sprache Zustimmen und LinkedIn beitreten Wenn Sie auf „Weiter“ klicken, um Mitglied zu werden oder sich einzuloggen, stimmen Sie der Nutzervereinbarung , der Datenschutzrichtlinie und der Cookie-Richtlinie von LinkedIn zu. Loggen Sie sich ein, um zu sehen, wen Sie bereits bei Tower kennen. Einloggen Schön, dass Sie wieder da sind E-Mail-Adresse/Telefon Passwort Einblenden Passwort vergessen? Einloggen oder Wenn Sie auf „Weiter“ klicken, um Mitglied zu werden oder sich einzuloggen, stimmen Sie der Nutzervereinbarung , der Datenschutzrichtlinie und der Cookie-Richtlinie von LinkedIn zu. Neu bei LinkedIn? Mitglied werden oder Neu bei LinkedIn? Mitglied werden Wenn Sie auf „Weiter“ klicken, um Mitglied zu werden oder sich einzuloggen, stimmen Sie der Nutzervereinbarung , der Datenschutzrichtlinie und der Cookie-Richtlinie von LinkedIn zu. | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_87 | February 2024 (version 1.87) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 February 2024 (version 1.87) Update 1.87.1 : The update addresses these issues . Update 1.87.2 : The update addresses this security issue . Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the February 2024 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Voice dictation in editor - Use your voice to dictate directly in the editor. Multi-cursor inline suggestions - Review and accept inline suggestions for multiple cursors. Copilot-powered rename suggestions - Get rename suggestions for symbols from Copilot. Side-by-side preview refactoring - Preview refactorings across files with multi diff editor. Smarter Python imports - Improvements for adding missing Python imports. Sticky scroll in editor - Sticky scroll is enabled by default in the editor. Multi-language support for speech - Multiple languages supported for speech recognition. Copilot suggestions for dev containers - Get template and feature suggestions for dev container configurations. If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Accessibility Use dictation in the editor You can now use your voice to dictate directly into the editor, provided that you have installed the VS Code Speech extension. We've added new commands to start and stop editor dictation: Voice: Start Dictation in Editor ( ⌥⌘V (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Alt+V ) ) and Voice: Stop Dictation in Editor ( Escape ). You can press and hold the keybinding for the start command ( ⌥⌘V (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Alt+V ) ) to enable walky-talky mode, where the voice recognition stops as soon as you release the keys. Note: dictation even works in other places where a rich editor is used, such as the SCM commit input box and the comments input field when reviewing pull requests. Multiple languages supported for speech recognition When you use the VS Code Speech extension, you can now select from one of the 26 supported languages by using the accessibility.voice.speechLanguage setting. Each language for the speech extension comes as its own extension. When you start speech recognition for the first time, you will see an extension installation for each language you selected. Accessibility signals Accessibility signals encompass both sounds, formerly called audio cues, and announcements, formerly called alerts. The commands Help: List Signal Sounds and Help: List Signal Announcements allow users to view the available signals and configure them. Migration to this new configuration happens automatically. Before: "audioCues.clear" : "on | auto | off" "accessibility.alert.clear" : true | false After: "accessibility.signals.clear" : { "sound" : "auto | on | off" , "announcement" (optional) : "auto | off" } Workbench Interactive settings in the release notes To make it easier for you to get started with a new feature, you can now enable or view a setting directly from the release notes. When you view the release notes from within VS Code ( Show Release Notes command), notice that some settings have a gear icon. Select the setting or gear icon to immediately interact with the setting. Transparency and control of language model access This iteration, we introduced a proposed API that gives extensions the ability to use GitHub Copilot Chat's language models. To provide the most transparency and control of access to the models, we have added the following features. Manage language model access like you manage authentication access We found that managing access to language models was very similar to managing access to your GitHub account or Microsoft account (or anything that leverages the AuthenticationProvider model) in VS Code. Because of these similarities, we've leveraged VS Code's auth stack for access to language models as well. When an extension wants to access the language models of another extension, they'll see a one-time prompt for access that will be persisted: Once access is granted, you'll be able to manage that access in the same place you manage access to your accounts, in the account menu: "Manage Trusted Extensions" leading you to a quick pick where you can manage access if you so choose: With the initial work done, we'll continue to refine the experience so it's as smooth and clear as possible. Track language model usage of an extension You can track language model usage of an extension in the Extension Editor and Runtime Extensions Editor. Following images show the number of requests made by the Copilot Chat Sample Extension to the GitHub Copilot Chat language model. Editor Editor Sticky Scroll This iteration we're enabling Sticky Scroll in the editor by default. You can change this using the setting editor.stickyScroll.enabled . We have also increased the maximum number of lines that can be displayed within the editor sticky widget from 10 to 20. You can configure the maximum line count with the setting editor.stickyScroll.maxLineCount . Inline completions for multiple cursors This iteration we have added support for multi-cursor inline completions. Now, the inline completions are previewed and applied at both the primary and the secondary cursor positions. Refactor preview in multi diff editor With Refactor preview, you can review the changes that will be applied by a code refactoring. Refactor preview changes are now shown in a multi diff editor, which facilitates seeing all changes at a glance and comparing them against the previous version. Terminal Command duration tracked Terminal duration is now tracked and details are shown in the command hover when shell integration is enabled: New commands to zoom in, out and reset There are new commands to zoom in, zoom out, and reset the terminal font size. These are unbound by default, but you can bind them to your preferred keybindings. Terminal: Increase Font Size ( workbench.action.terminal.fontZoomIn ) Terminal: Decrease Font Size ( workbench.action.terminal.fontZoomOut ) Terminal: Reset Font Size ( workbench.action.terminal.fontZoomReset ) Source Control Include repository or branch name in the window title Users can customize the window title by using the window.title setting. This iteration, we added two new variables that can be used with this setting: ${activeRepositoryName} , and ${activeRepositoryBranchName} . These variables are replaced with the name of the active repository and the active branch, respectively. Commit input validation improvements This iteration, we explored using language diagnostics to provide better input validation for authoring commit messages. Using language diagnostics enables us to surface code actions that can be invoked to resolve the input validation warnings. We added code actions to remove whitespace characters, hard wrap lines based on the git.inputValidationSubjectLength , and git.inputValidationLength settings, and we are looking to add more code actions in the future. To enable it, toggle the git.inputValidation setting. We have some issues to work through before we can enable this by default, but in the meantime feel free to enable it and let us know your feedback. Incoming/Outgoing changes settings management We continue to polish the Incoming/Outgoing section of the Source Control view. This iteration, we added a settings action to the "Incoming/Outgoing" separator that allows users to toggle the scm.showIncomingChanges , scm.showOutgoingChanges , and scm.showChangesSummary settings more easily. These actions are also available in the Incoming & Outgoing menu in the ... menu of the Source Control view's title bar. Close All Unmodified Editors command To help with editor management, we have added the Close All Unmodified Editors command to the command palette that will close all editors that have unmodified files. The command will not close editors that have unsaved changes. Notebooks Indentation settings for notebooks We now support notebook-specific indentation settings via the notebook.editorOptionsCustomizations setting. This setting allows users to set a specific indentation style for notebooks, via the editor.tabSize , editor.indentSize , and editor.insertSpaces settings. Users will also notice a status bar entry named Notebook Indentation that shows the current indentation settings for the notebook editor. This entry has a quick pick menu, which enables managing the indentation settings without having to open the Settings editor. This is the same quick pick menu that is also available in the editor. Debug Support for new BreakpointMode VS Code supports a new addition to the Debug Adapter Protocol (DAP) that allows you to set different 'modes' of breakpoints. This functionality might commonly be used by debuggers of native code, for example, to set hardware versus software breakpoints. The mode of a breakpoint can be changed with the Edit Mode action in its context menu. Remote Development The Remote Development extensions , allow you to use a Dev Container , remote machine via SSH or Remote Tunnels , or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. Highlights include: GitHub Copilot Chat suggests templates and features when adding dev container configuration files to a workspace You can learn more about these features in the Remote Development release notes . Don't miss the recent Remote development with Visual Studio Code Learn path to get an introduction to the different remote development features in VS Code. Contributions to extensions GitHub Copilot Rename suggestions We are gradually rolling out rename suggestions by Copilot. When you rename a symbol in the editor, GitHub Copilot suggests a list of possible new names for that symbol, based on your code. Inline chat accessibility view Inline chat now has an accessibility view that shows code changes just like the accessible diff viewer does. The accessibility view is enabled when you use screen reader mode. You can also configure it to always be on or off by using the inlineChat.accessibleDiffView setting. Also, change-hunks can now be navigated with the keyboard with the F7 and Shift+F7 keybindings. Default mode for inline chat We have retired the live preview mode and made live the default mode for inline chat. This means that suggestions are applied directly in the editor and changes are highlighted via inline diffs. Microphone icon is always visible The microphone icon to start voice recognition in Copilot Chat is now always visible. When the VS Code Speech extension is not yet installed, selecting the icon firsts asks to install the extension to enable speech-to-text capabilities. If you are not interested in this feature, or you only want to use it via keyboard shortcuts, you can hide the functionality from the context menu: Voice support for agents and slash commands When you use the VS Code Speech extension to fill the chat input field via voice, phrases such as "at workspace" or "slash fix" now translate into the respective agent and slash commands. This works in both the Chat view and in inline chat. Walky-talky mode everywhere When you use the VS Code Speech extension, the command Voice: Start Voice Chat ( ⌘I (Windows, Linux Ctrl+I ) ) now works everywhere and brings up a voice chat, depending on where your focus is (inline chat in the editor, panel chat otherwise). To enable walky-talky mode, press and hold the keybinding. Voice recognition is active until you release the keys, after which the request is submitted automatically. Copilot: Explain This based on cursor position Previously, entering Explain This in chat required that you first selected the text to explain in your active editor. You can now also place your cursor on an identifier to get Copilot to see the identifier's definition. If the definition is in another file, this requires rich language support to be available. Preview: #codebase variable This iteration, in the pre-release version of GitHub Copilot Chat, we introduced a new chat variable called #codebase . This variable can be used to provide workspace context, based on your query, to Copilot or a chat participant you are talking to. In this example, you can think of #codebase as asking @workspace the question first, and then adding that response to the question you're asking @terminal . This is a preview feature, so #codebase might not be the final name of this variable but the intent is that we will provide some way to include workspace context to chat participants. Again, this is only in the pre-release version of GitHub Copilot Chat. Let us know what you think and how you use it! Terminal workspace context The terminal no longer automatically pulls in workspace context, which could take some time. Instead, you need to explicitly include it by using the #codebase variable. Terminal chat location There is a new setting github.copilot.chat.terminalChatLocation , which controls the terminal chat experience. The default value is chatView , and can be configured to quickChat if you prefer the previous behavior. Jupyter Language Server support for locally running Jupyter Servers When connecting to local Jupyter Servers, the Jupyter extension previously treated these Jupyter Servers as remote. As a result, the Pylance extension was unable to detect the installed packages. This iteration, the Jupyter extension detects whether the connected Jupyter Server is local or remote. This enables the Pylance extension to provide richer language features, based on packages installed (within a local Python Environment). Python Shell integration for the Python REPL We now have shell integration for Python REPL enabled on Mac, Linux, and Windows via the WSL extension . When you execute commands in the Python REPL, colored circles decorators indicate whether the commands succeeded or failed. Additionally, we also support the Terminal: Run Recent Command… command for Python REPL, which enables you to view and utilize the REPL’s command history. We now also support Python’s shell file history for all operating systems, accessible via Terminal: Run Recent Command . Reducing risk of ignored first command Previously, a number of Python REPL users noticed issues with their first command to the Python REPL (for example, by using Shift+Enter ). Either their Python command was ignored and not sent to Python REPL, or the command was pasted multiple times in the shell that launches Python REPL instead of the Python REPL itself. This behavior happened especially for users on Windows, or users working on older machines. In this iteration, we made efforts to mitigate and reduce the risk of this behavior happening. Users now experience less occurrence of their first command being lost when they send their Python command to the first REPL instance inside VS Code. Improvements for adding missing imports The Pylance extension provides an Add Imports code action for adding missing imports. In the pre-release version of Pylance, we improved this code action. Pylance now uses heuristics to show only the top three high-confidence import options, prioritized based on the following criteria: most recently used imports, symbols from the same module, symbols from the standard library, symbols from user modules, symbols from third-party packages, and finally sorting by module and symbol name. Additionally, two new code actions are introduced: Search for additional import matches , which displays a quick pick menu that allows you to search for import options that prefix-match the missing import symbol, and Change spelling , which offers import suggestions for missing imports due to typos. You can enable this behavior now with the python.analysis.addImport.heuristics setting. We plan to make this the new default behaviour soon, and deprecate the setting in a future release. Automatically open the browser when debugging Django or Flask apps Developing and testing your Python web applications is now more convenient with the Python Debugger extension ! You can now get the browser to automatically open when starting the debugger with Django or Flask apps, by setting autoStartBrowser: true in your launch.json configuration: { "name" : "Python Debugger: Flask" , "type" : "debugpy" , "request" : "launch" , "module" : "flask" , "env" : { "FLASK_APP" : "hello_app.webapp" , "FLASK_DEBUG" : "1" }, "args" : [ "run" ], "jinja" : true , "autoStartBrowser" : true } Bug fix for Pytest in symlinked workspaces We implemented a bug fix that enables pytest tests to function correctly for workspaces that have symlinks. On the testing rewrite, test from symlink locations are referenced and run correctly by their symlink paths. GitHub Pull Requests There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests extension, which enables you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. New features include: Renamed from "GitHub Pull Requests and Issues" to "GitHub Pull Requests" The email associated with a merge or squash commit can be chosen at merge/squash time The setting githubPullRequests.labelCreated can be used to configure the labels that are automatically added to PRs that are created "Owner level" PR templates are now supported Projects can be added at PR and issue creation time Review the changelog for the 0.82.0 release of the extension to learn about the other highlights. Preview Features For extension authors: Preview of @vscode/l10n-dev and Azure AI Translator This iteration, we have introduced a new command, a subcommand of @vscode/l10n-dev , that allows you to translate your strings using Azure AI Translator . After exporting your strings, and creating an Azure AI Translator instance, you can set the AZURE_TRANSLATOR_KEY & AZURE_TRANSLATOR_REGION environment variables and then you can run the following command to generate translations using Azure AI Translator: npx @vscode/l10n-dev generate-azure -o ./l10n/ ./l10n/bundle.l10n.json ./package.nls.json Azure AI Translator offers a free tier. We thought it was a good opportunity to offer tooling to extension authors so that they can more easily support the many users who speak various languages. Do keep in mind that these are machine translations, so they might not always be perfect. They can be a good jumping off point to more refined translations from people who speak the language, if you have the ability to do so. For more information, take a look at the l10n-dev documentation on the Azure AI Translator integration. Extension Authoring Test Coverage in Extensions Extension authors who are using the test CLI for their extensions can generate test coverage by updating to the latest version of the @vscode/test-cli package. Coverage can be generated on the command line by passing the --coverage flag when running tests, and in the VS Code UI by using the Run with Coverage actions. Test configurations in launch.json You can now reference test configuration files in your launch.json configuration: { "type": "extensionHost", "request": "launch", "name": "My extension tests", + "testConfiguration": "${workspaceFolder}/.vscode-test.js", - "args": ["--extensionDevelopmentPath=${workspaceFolder}"] }, The various args that were previously required, are generated for you, but any additional arguments passed will be appended to VS Code's command line. Contributing Additional Data in Issue Reporter Last iteration, we added fields for data and uri in the workbench.action.openIssueReporter command. This enabled extensions to directly open the native issue reporter with more prefilled information. To let extensions benefit from this in the separate case of navigating the normal issue reporter flow via Help: Reporter Issues... , extensions can contribute a custom command (which will invoke openIssueReporter ) and a menu contribution point to issue/reporter . An example of a contributed command and menu for contributes in package.json : "commands" : [ { "command" : "extension.myCommand" , "title" : "Report Issue" } ], "menus" : { "issue/reporter" : [ { "command" : "extension.myCommand" } ] } Subscribe to issue #196863 for updates or changes to the API and openIssueReporter command. Proposed APIs Chat and Language Model APIs nearing their finalization We have been working on support for extensions to contribute to the Chat view and general use of language models. We are now in the final stages of finalizing the following APIs and would love to hear your feedback: Chat participant ( issue #199908 ) - vscode.proposed.chatParticipant.d.ts Language model use ( issue #206265 ) - vscode.proposed.languageModels.d.ts Learn more about how to build chat extensions and how you can use language models in our extension guides. FindFiles2 API We have added a new proposed extension API that is an improved version of the existing workspace.FindFiles API. The new workspace.FindFiles2 API introduces new options that allow a workspace file search to: Respect files.exclude and search.exclude settings Respect ignore files Perform a fuzzy search Follow symlinks You can review the new API here . Note that FindFiles2 is a tentative name and that this functionality might be provided as an alternative overload of FindFiles in the future. Test Coverage API This iteration, the Test Coverage API and in-editor experience are in feature-complete state. We encourage extension authors to try them out and provide feedback before their forecasted finalization in the VS Code 1.88 release. The Extension Pack for Java has already adopted the Test Coverage API. Developers can already see the coverage results running Java tests. Now you can get to test coverage by selecting the Run Test With Coverage button, and view the Test Coverage panel in the Test Explorer view. Learn more about the Test Coverage with the Extension Pack for Java in the team's December and January update. While the API is too lengthy to include here, we believe it to be fairly straightforward, and would welcome your input on the proposal in issue #123713 . Debug Visualizer API We have a new API that enables extensions to contribute visualizers for a variable. These visualizers might be either actions that run a command, such as opening a new editor, or trees embedded inline into the Debug views and that take the place of the data's default representation. You can review the new API here . New Symbol Names Provider API This API allows extensions to provide name suggestions when the user wants to rename a symbol. Notable fixes 184046 Links sometimes stop working completely in terminals Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @RedCMD (RedCMD) @starball5 (starball) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @a-stewart (Anthony Stewart) : Prevent F1 from opening browser help in webviews PR #204499 @aramikuto (Aleksandr Kondrashov) Do not use respectMultiSelection for upload and paste PR #201145 Ensure that cursor state change is always emitted upon restoring state PR #203451 @CGNonofr (Loïc Mangeonjean) Replace map by foreach PR #199194 Fix inoperative try/catch PR #203904 @charlypoirier (Charly) : Fix typo in configurationEditingMain.ts PR #203970 @emilan (Emil) : Fix for automatic folderOpen tasks with Remote SSH extension PR #204008 @fmarier (Francois Marier) : Use HTTPS for the apt repository PR #203833 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) Reinstate command items when filtering checkout quickpick (fix #202870) PR #204107 Make Collapse/Expand All button of Search tree initialize correctly (fix #204316) PR #205235 @harbin1053020115 (ermin.zem) : chore: update vscode known variables PR #204568 @hsfzxjy (Xie Jingyi) : Add duration to the terminal command SI tooltip PR #199357 @jcarrus (Justin Carrus) : Increase editor.stickyScroll.maxLineCount from 10 to 20 PR #201451 @jnnklhmnn (Jannik Lehmann) : Introduce Collapse All Action to Loaded Scripts PR #203560 @Krzysztof-Cieslak (Krzysztof Cieślak) Improve inline edit commands' preconditions PR #205373 Don't run onDidBlurEditorWidget and onDidFocusEditorText if inline edit is disabled PR #205378 Inline edit - don't send reject callback on blur PR #205976 @luctowers (Lucas Towers) : Fix markdown light and dark mode when using high contrast themes PR #203690 @NorthSecond (Yifei Yang) : Fix: GLIBCXX version detection bug in check-requirements-linux.sh (issue #204186) PR #204635 @notnoop (Mahmood Ali) : vscode server: cope with multiple libc/libc++ installations PR #204032 @orgads (Orgad Shaneh) : Tunnel: Extend port mapping lookup also for querystring PR #203908 @owlhuang (Dennis) : Pass the check if any one of the library (of the arch) satisfies the requirement. PR #204221 @perplexyves (Yves Daaboul) : fix(193523): JSDoc optional parameters don't display in functions PR #202963 @petvas (Peter V) : Fix IRawGalleryExtension.shortDescription can be undefined. PR #202780 @pyrrho (Drew Pirrone-Brusse) : Extend TextEditorLineNumbersStyle with Interval PR #198787 @RedCMD (RedCMD) Contribute to json language server with a custom language. PR #198583 Enable json language support for code-snippets files PR #204090 Improve extension README preview markdown codeblock language detection PR #205329 @rzvc : Fix docblock expansion in TS, when asterisk not preceded by a space PR #204400 @sandersn (Nathan Shively-Sanders) : Split TS' AI-backed code actions into separate entries PR #201140 @SimonSiefke (Simon Siefke) fix: memory leak in notebook editor widget PR #204892 fix: memory leak in code editor widget PR #205488 @timotheeMM (timotheeMM) : Fix a typo in src/vs/platform/terminal/common/terminal.ts PR #204245 @tisilent (xiejialong) : dispose sash PR #199081 @tomqwpl : fix: Not populating extension when selecting notebook kernel (#_197619) PR #197810 @vbem (Lei LI) : Fix typo in shellIntegration-bash.sh PR #203407 @weartist (Hans) : Fix the broken links to the latest valid links PR #184131 @werat (Andy Hippo) Fix memory leak in comments browser PR #205162 Fix memory leaks PR #205589 @wy-luke : docs: update comment for hideFromUser PR #202730 @xavierdecoster (Xavier Decoster) : Update comment in extensionGalleryService.ts PR #205004 @xiaoyun94 (暴躁暴躁最暴躁/Bigforce) : Fix browser host open additional files in merge mode PR #205663 @yiliang114 (易良) : Add tips for debug views PR #205861 Contributions to vscode-black-formatter : @bn-d (Boning) : Update min vscode version PR #445 Contributions to vscode-hexeditor : @deitry (Dmitry Vornychev) : Fix plugin description PR #480 @jogo- Display unsigned before signed int64 PR #482 Display ascii character in data inspector PR #483 Show status offset and selection in dec and hexa PR #486 Display in data inspector ULEB128 and SLEB128 PR #488 Fix typos in CHANGELOG.md PR #489 @liudonghua123 (liudonghua) : add common cjk encoding (gb18030 for simple Chinese, big5 for traditional Chinese, euc-kr for Korean, euc-jp for Japanese) datatype support PR #465 Contributions to vscode-isort : @archont94 : Fix for selecting isort settings from path PR #386 @connorads (Connor Adams) : Update config example PR #390 Contributions to vscode-languageserver-node : @michaelpj (Michael Peyton Jones) Remove proposed tags from new names for structure literals PR #1417 Add Haskell to LanguageKind PR #1421 @w0rm (Andrey Kuzmin) : Round progress percentage according to the spec PR #1413 Contributions to vscode-pull-request-github : @Malix-off (Malix) : Fix #5693 PR #5694 @umakantv (Umakant Vashishtha) : Feature: Auto Populate Labels PR #5679 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @alanwsmith (Alan Smith) : Removed deprecated Rust Language Server (RLS) PR #1899 @debonte (Erik De Bonte) : Add WorkspaceEditMetadata support PR #1881 @falko17 (Falko) : Snippet grammar fixes and minor formal improvements throughout the LSP spec PR #1886 @MariaSolOs (Maria José Solano) Add snippet text edit specification PR #1892 Add string value definition PR #1893 Remove insertTextFormat from InlineCompletionItem PR #1894 @michaelpj (Michael Peyton Jones) : Add Haskell to language kind table PR #1898 @qvalentin (valentin) : feat(implementors): add helm-ls PR #1895 Contributions to node-pty : @kkocdko (kkocdko) : Port to NAPI PR #644 On this page there are 14 sections On this page Accessibility Workbench Editor Terminal Source Control Notebooks Debug Remote Development Contributions to extensions Preview Features Extension Authoring Proposed APIs Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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Right menu Why Your Job Isn’t Disappearing—But Your Tasks Are (Part 3: The Career) synthaicode synthaicode synthaicode Follow Jan 12 Why Your Job Isn’t Disappearing—But Your Tasks Are (Part 3: The Career) # ai # career # management # softwaredevelopment 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 3 min read Claude Code: Replace Yourself with Specialized AI Developers Ownlife Ownlife Ownlife Follow Jan 12 Claude Code: Replace Yourself with Specialized AI Developers # ai # agents # softwaredevelopment Comments Add Comment 24 min read O que 70 especificações me ensinaram sobre agentes de código Alberto Luiz Souza Alberto Luiz Souza Alberto Luiz Souza Follow Jan 12 O que 70 especificações me ensinaram sobre agentes de código # agents # ai # softwaredevelopment 1 reaction Comments 1 comment 6 min read Package Updates Are Investments, Not Hygiene Tasks Steven Stuart Steven Stuart Steven Stuart Follow Jan 12 Package Updates Are Investments, Not Hygiene Tasks # leadership # softwaredevelopment # testing Comments Add Comment 8 min read Where AI Is Actually Taking Software Development Careers Jaber-Said Jaber-Said Jaber-Said Follow Jan 12 Where AI Is Actually Taking Software Development Careers # ai # softwaredevelopment # careeradvice # futureofwork Comments Add Comment 4 min read Self-Documenting Code vs. Comments: Lessons from Maintaining Large-Scale Codebases ThankGod Chibugwum Obobo ThankGod Chibugwum Obobo ThankGod Chibugwum Obobo Follow Jan 11 Self-Documenting Code vs. Comments: Lessons from Maintaining Large-Scale Codebases # webdev # softwaredevelopment # programming Comments Add Comment 3 min read Baseline Testing for Developers: Catching Regressions Without Slowing CI Sophie Lane Sophie Lane Sophie Lane Follow Jan 12 Baseline Testing for Developers: Catching Regressions Without Slowing CI # devops # baselinetesting # softwaredevelopment Comments Add Comment 4 min read AI is changing how we build software: here's how to do it safely Colosl Colosl Colosl Follow Jan 11 AI is changing how we build software: here's how to do it safely # ai # cybersecurity # softwaredevelopment Comments Add Comment 6 min read Code Review Guidelines for Modern Development Teams Yeahia Sarker Yeahia Sarker Yeahia Sarker Follow Jan 12 Code Review Guidelines for Modern Development Teams # codequality # productivity # softwaredevelopment Comments Add Comment 3 min read Sharing a Talk: "How to Build Your Own Open Source Project" Evan Lin Evan Lin Evan Lin Follow Jan 11 Sharing a Talk: "How to Build Your Own Open Source Project" # beginners # opensource # softwaredevelopment Comments Add Comment 7 min read Ticket Booking System (BookMyShow) High-level System Design Arghya Majumder Arghya Majumder Arghya Majumder Follow Jan 11 Ticket Booking System (BookMyShow) High-level System Design # softwareengineering # softwaredevelopment # locking # ticketbookingsystem Comments Add Comment 58 min read What AI Actually Replaces in Software Development (Part 2: The Reality) synthaicode synthaicode synthaicode Follow Jan 11 What AI Actually Replaces in Software Development (Part 2: The Reality) # ai # career # management # softwaredevelopment Comments Add Comment 3 min read Why APIs Are the Backbone of Modern Applications Ravish Kumar Ravish Kumar Ravish Kumar Follow Jan 11 Why APIs Are the Backbone of Modern Applications # api # softwaredevelopment # webdev Comments Add Comment 3 min read Book Review: Talent Management Bible - Learning Best Practices from Fortune 500 Companies Evan Lin Evan Lin Evan Lin Follow Jan 11 Book Review: Talent Management Bible - Learning Best Practices from Fortune 500 Companies # ui # ai # nvidia # softwaredevelopment Comments Add Comment 4 min read Structured Concurrency in Go: Stop Letting Goroutines Escape Serif COLAKEL Serif COLAKEL Serif COLAKEL Follow Jan 11 Structured Concurrency in Go: Stop Letting Goroutines Escape # go # softwaredevelopment # softwareengineering # backend Comments Add Comment 2 min read Why Claude Code Excels at Legacy System Modernization Juha Pellotsalo Juha Pellotsalo Juha Pellotsalo Follow Jan 11 Why Claude Code Excels at Legacy System Modernization # ai # claudecode # legacycode # softwaredevelopment Comments Add Comment 2 min read The Rise of Low-Code and No-Code Development Ravish Kumar Ravish Kumar Ravish Kumar Follow Jan 11 The Rise of Low-Code and No-Code Development # beginners # productivity # softwaredevelopment # tooling Comments Add Comment 3 min read Architecting Rx-Gated E-commerce with EMR Integration: Best Path for Authorize-Only Payments and Clinical Approval Workflow MattyIce MattyIce MattyIce Follow Jan 8 Architecting Rx-Gated E-commerce with EMR Integration: Best Path for Authorize-Only Payments and Clinical Approval Workflow # discuss # architecture # softwaredevelopment # softwareengineering Comments Add Comment 1 min read How to: NuGet local feeds Karen Payne Karen Payne Karen Payne Follow Jan 10 How to: NuGet local feeds # csharp # dotnetcore # softwaredevelopment # codenewbie Comments Add Comment 3 min read Is the Cult of Constant 'Trying Things Out' Killing Your Engineering Efficiency? Oleg Oleg Oleg Follow Jan 10 Is the Cult of Constant 'Trying Things Out' Killing Your Engineering Efficiency? # productivity # engineeringmanagement # softwaredevelopment # ai 5 reactions Comments 1 comment 5 min read Building With AI Made Me Realize How Often We Don’t Understand Our Own Code azril hakim azril hakim azril hakim Follow Jan 11 Building With AI Made Me Realize How Often We Don’t Understand Our Own Code # ai # softwaredevelopment # programming # productivity 2 reactions Comments 1 comment 2 min read Why the global boom of pádel requires advanced technology and smarter booking apps luis Yanguas Gómez de la serna luis Yanguas Gómez de la serna luis Yanguas Gómez de la serna Follow Jan 10 Why the global boom of pádel requires advanced technology and smarter booking apps # discuss # powerapps # softwaredevelopment # devops Comments Add Comment 3 min read # Why Version Control Exists: The Pendrive Problem saiyam gupta saiyam gupta saiyam gupta Follow Jan 10 # Why Version Control Exists: The Pendrive Problem # beginners # git # softwaredevelopment 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read The complex road to building software with AI, and why human experts still matter luis Yanguas Gómez de la serna luis Yanguas Gómez de la serna luis Yanguas Gómez de la serna Follow Jan 10 The complex road to building software with AI, and why human experts still matter # ai # softwaredevelopment # programming Comments Add Comment 5 min read My First Anniversary at insightsoftware — A Year of Learning Real Software Engineering SUVAM AGRAWAL SUVAM AGRAWAL SUVAM AGRAWAL Follow Jan 9 My First Anniversary at insightsoftware — A Year of Learning Real Software Engineering # insightsoftware # softwareengineering # software # softwaredevelopment 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 2 min read loading... trending guides/resources Are We Losing Our Manners in Software Development? The Secret Life of JavaScript: Understanding Closures Deadlocks in Go: The Silent Production Killer The Secret Life of JavaScript: Currying vs. Partial Application Right way to vibe code that actually works I Chose ByteByteGo in 2025: The One System Design Course That Actually Works The Secret Life of JavaScript: Understanding Prototypes How to Use AI Models Locally in VS Code with the Continue Plugin (with Multi-Model Switching Supp... Setup Hashicorp Vault + Vault Agent on Docker Compose n8n: A Great Starting Point, But Not Where Real Engineering Lives Top 5 Rust Frameworks (2025) Create a Text Editor in Go - Search From Video to Voiceover in Seconds: Running MLX Swift on ARM-Based iOS Devices When Oracle Got Hacked (and the Hackers Fought Each Other) My Current Tech Stack in 2026 The Vibe Coding Hangover: How to Stop AI From Ruining Your Codebase Why I Wrote AI Coding Guidelines and You Should Too The Secret Life of JavaScript: Memories AI writes pretty good code these days and it doesn't really matter The Secret Life of Python: Attribute Lookup Secrets 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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https://defectivebydesign.org?pk_campaign=fsfhome | We oppose DRM. | Defective by Design Skip to main content --> ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more Join Renew Donate Defective by Design Home What is DRM? Take Action DRM-free Guide Blog Contact Donate Give the gift of freedom! The Ethical Tech Giving Guide replaces DRM-laden software and devices that trample user freedom and privacy with products and programs that you can trust. Read more Get the t-shirt! Look sharp while you fight for digital freedoms with our "DRM - no one admitted" t-shirt Show your support Eliminate DRM If we want to avoid a future in which our devices serve as an apparatus to monitor and control our interaction with digital media, we must fight to retain control of our media and software. Take action We oppose DRM. We are a participatory and grassroots campaign exposing DRM-encumbered devices and media for what they really are: Defective by Design. We are working together to eliminate DRM as a threat to innovation in media, the privacy of readers, and freedom for computer users. Learn more » Repeat offenders These companies don't want a free web. They think they make money by limiting your freedom. More » The dirty truth about DRM. "If consumers even know there's a DRM, what it is, and how it works, we've already failed." —Peter Lee, Disney Executive in an interview with The Economist in 2005. Get action alerts Email * We won't share your information. Blog Amazon tightens the digital handcuffs Mar 5 Keep putting pressure on Microsoft Dec 27 IDAD 2024 - Dec. 20: For freedom, against restriction Dec 16 Our work isn't over: Keep fighting for the freedom to learn Dec 19 Worldwide community of activists protest OverDrive and others forcing DRM upon libraries Nov 28 Go to blog » Check out other Free Software Foundation campaigns GNU , a free Unix-like operating system Upgrade from Windows , pledge to free your computer today! Defective by Design is a campaign of the Follow us on Mastodon and Twitter . Copyright © 2006—2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 4.0 license (or later version) — Why this license? Copyright Infringement Notification JavaScript License Information | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_102 | June 2025 (version 1.102) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 June 2025 (version 1.102) Release date: July 9, 2025 Update 1.102.1 : The update addresses these issues . Update 1.102.2 : The update addresses these issues . Update 1.102.3 : The update addresses these issues . Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the June 2025 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Chat Explore and contribute to the open sourced GitHub Copilot Chat extension ( Read our blog post ). Generate custom instructions that reflect your project's conventions ( Show more ). Use custom modes to tailor chat for tasks like planning or research ( Show more ). Automatically approve selected terminal commands ( Show more ). Edit and resubmit previous chat requests ( Show more ). MCP MCP support is now generally available in VS Code ( Show more ). Easily install and manage MCP servers with the MCP view and gallery ( Show more ). MCP servers as first-class resources in profiles and Settings Sync ( Show more ). Editor experience Delegate tasks to Copilot coding agent and let it handle them in the background ( Show more ). Scroll the editor on middle click ( Show more ). If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Chat Copilot Chat is open source We're excited to announce that we've open sourced the GitHub Copilot Chat extension! The source code is now available at microsoft/vscode-copilot-chat under the MIT license. This marks a significant milestone in our commitment to transparency and community collaboration. By open sourcing the extension, we're enabling the community to: Contribute directly to the development of AI-powered chat experiences in VS Code Understand the implementation of chat modes, custom instructions, and AI integrations Build upon our work to create even better AI developer tools Participate in shaping the future of AI-assisted coding You can explore the repository to see how features like agent mode , inline chat , and MCP integration are implemented. We welcome contributions, feedback, and collaboration from the community. To learn more about this milestone and our broader vision for open source AI editor tooling, read our detailed blog post: Open Source AI Editor - First Milestone . Chat mode improvements Last milestone, we previewed custom chat modes . In addition to the built-in chat modes 'Ask', 'Edit' and 'Agent', you can define your own chat modes with specific instructions and a set of allowed tools that you want the LLM to follow when replying to a request. This milestone, we have made several improvements and bug fixes in this area. Configure language model Upon popular request, you can now also specify which language model should be used for a chat mode. Add the model metadata property to your chatmode.md file and provide the model identifier (we provide IntelliSense for the model info). Improved editing support The editor for chat modes , prompts , and instruction files now supports completions, validation, and hovers for all supported metadata properties. Gear menu in the chat view The Configure Chat action in the Chat view toolbar lets you manage custom modes as well as reusable instructions, prompts, and tool sets: Selecting Modes shows all currently installed custom modes and enables you to open, create new, or delete modes. Import modes, prompts and instructions via a vscode link You can now import chat mode, reusable prompt and instruction files from external links, such as a gist or our awesome-copilot community repository. For example, the following link will import the chat mode file for Burke's GPT 4.1 Beast Mode: Add GPT 4.1 Beast Mode to VS Code This will prompt for a destination, either your current workspace or your user settings, and confirm the name before importing the mode file from the URL. Try it out on the 100+ community-contributed instructions, prompts, and chat modes at awesome-copilot . Generate custom instructions Setting up custom instructions for your project can significantly improve AI suggestions by providing context about your coding standards and project conventions. However, creating effective instructions from scratch might be challenging. This milestone, we're introducing the Chat: Generate Instructions command to help you bootstrap custom instructions for your workspace. Run this command from the Command Palette or the Configure menu in the Chat view, and agent mode will analyze your codebase to generate tailored instructions that reflect your project's structure, technologies, and patterns. The command creates a copilot-instructions.md file in your .github folder or suggests improvements to existing instruction files. You can then review and customize the generated instructions to match your team's specific needs. Learn more about customizing AI responses with instructions . Load instruction files on demand Instruction files can be used to describe coding practices and project requirements. Instructions can be manually or automatically included as context to chat requests. There are various mechanisms supported, see the Custom Instructions section in our documentation. For larger instructions that you want to include conditionally, you can use .instructions.md files in combination with glob patterns defined in the applyTo header. The file is automatically added when the glob pattern matches one or more of the files in the context of the chat. New in this release, the large language model can load instructions on demand. Each request gets a list of all instruction files, along with glob pattern and description. In this example, the LLM has no instructions for TypeScript files explicitly added in the context. So, it looks for code style rules before creating a TypeScript file: Edit previous requests (Experimental) You can now click on previous requests to modify the text content, attached context, mode, and model. Upon submitting this change, this will remove all subsequent requests, undo any edits made, and send the new request in chat. There will be a controlled rollout of different entry points to editing requests, which will help us gather feedback on preferential edit and undo flows. However, users can set their preferred mode with the experimental chat.editRequests setting: chat.editRequests.inline : Hover a request and select the text to begin an edit inline with the request. chat.editRequests.hover : Hover a request to reveal a toolbar with a button to begin an edit inline with the request. chat.editRequests.input : Hover a request to reveal a toolbar, which will start edits in the input box at the bottom of chat. Terminal auto approval (Experimental) Agent mode now has a mechanism for auto approving commands in the terminal. Here's a demo of it using the defaults: There are currently two settings: the allow list and the deny list. The allow list is a list of command prefixes or regular expressions that when matched allows the command to be run without explicit approval. For example, the following will allow any command starting with npm run test to be run, as well as exactly git status or git log : "github.copilot.chat.agent.terminal.allowList" : { "npm run test" : true , "/^git (status|log)$/" : true } These settings are merged across setting scopes, such that you can have a set of user-approved commands, as well as workspace-specific approved commands. As for chained commands, we try to detect these cases based on the shell and require all sub-commands to be approved. So foo && bar we check that both foo and bar are allowed, only at that point will it run without approval. We also try to detect inline commands such as echo $(pwd) , which would check both echo $(pwd) and pwd . The deny list has the same format as the allow list but will override it and force approval. For now this is mostly of use if you have a broad entry in the allow list and want to block certain commands that it may include. For example the following will allow all commands starting with npm run except if it starts with npm run danger : "github.copilot.chat.agent.terminal.allowList" : { "npm run" : true }, "github.copilot.chat.agent.terminal.denyList" : { "npm run danger" : true } Thanks to the protections that we gain against prompt injection from workspace trust , the philosophy we've approached when implementing this feature with regards to security is to include a small set of innocuous commands in the allow list, and a set of particularly dangerous ones in the deny list just in case they manage to slip through. The allow list is empty by default as we're still considering what the defaults should be, but here is what we're thinking: Allow list: echo , cd , ls , cat , pwd , Write-Host , Set-Location , Get-ChildItem , Get-Content , Get-Location Deny list: rm , rmdir , del , kill , curl , wget , eval , chmod , chown , Remove-Item The two major parts we want to add to this feature are a UI entry point to more easily add new commands to the list ( #253268 ) and an opt-in option to allow an LLM to evaluate the command(s) safety ( #253267 ). We are also planning on both removing the github.copilot. prefix of these settings ( #253314 ) as well as merging them together ( #253472 ) in the next release before it becomes a preview setting. Terminal command simplification Agent mode sometimes wants to run commands with a cd statement, just in case. We now detect this case when it matches the current working directory and simplify the command that is run. Agent awareness of tasks and terminals Agent mode now understands which background terminals it has created and which tasks are actively running. The agent can read task output by using the new GetTaskOutput tool, which helps prevent running duplicate tasks and improves workspace context. Maximized chat view You can now maximize the Secondary Side Bar to span the editor area and hide the Primary Side Bar and panel area. VS Code will remember this state between restarts and will restore the Chat view when you open an editor or view. You can toggle in and out of the maximized state by using the new icon next to the close button, or use the new command workbench.action.toggleMaximizedAuxiliaryBar from the Command Palette. Agent mode badge indicator We now show a badge over the application icon in the dock when the window is not focused and the agent needs user confirmation to continue. The badge will disappear as soon as the related window that triggered it receives focus. You can enable or disable this badge via the chat.notifyWindowOnConfirmation setting. Start chat from the command line A new subcommand chat is added to the VS Code CLI that enables you to start a chat session in the current working directory with the prompt provided. The basic syntax is code chat [options] [prompt] and options can be any of: -m --mode <mode> : The mode to use for the chat session. Available options: 'ask', 'edit', 'agent', or the identifier of a custom mode. Defaults to 'agent' -a --add-file <path> : Add files as context to the chat session --maximize : Maximize the chat session view -r --reuse-window : Force to use the last active window for the chat session -n --new-window : Force to open an empty window for the chat session Reading from stdin is supported, provided you pass in - at the end, for example ps aux | grep code | code chat <prompt> - Fetch tool supports non-HTTP URLs We've seen that, on occasion, models want to call the Fetch tool with non-HTTP URLs, such as file:// URLs. Rather than disallowing this, the Fetch tool now supports these URLs and returns the content of the file or resource at the URL. Images are also supported. Clearer language model access management We've reworked the UX around managing extension access to language models provided by extensions. Previously, you saw an item in the Account menu that said AccountName (GitHub Copilot Chat) , which had nothing to do with what account GitHub Copilot Chat was using. Rather, it allowed you to manage which extensions had access to the language models provided by Copilot Chat. To make this clearer, we've removed the AccountName (GitHub Copilot Chat) item and replaced it with a new item called Manage Language Model Access... . This item opens a Quick Pick that enables you to manage which extensions have access to the language models provided by GitHub Copilot Chat. We think this is clearer... That said, in a future release we will explore more granular access control for language models (for example, only allowing specific models rather than all models provided by an extension), so stay tuned for that. Reading chat requests Since the chat extension itself is open source, you now get access to one of the debugging tools that we've been using internally for awhile. To easily see the details of all requests made by Copilot Chat, run the command "Show Chat Debug View". This will show a treeview with an entry for each request made. You can see the full prompt that was sent to the model, the tools that were enabled, the response, and other key details. You can save the request log with right click > "Export As...". The view also has entries for tool calls on their own, and a prompt-tsx debug view that opens in the Simple Browser. 🚨 Note : This log is very helpful in troubleshooting issues, and we will appreciate if you share it when filing an issue about the agent's behavior. But, this log may contain personal information such as the contents of your files or terminal output. Please review the contents carefully before sharing it with anyone else. Edit Tool Improvements This release includes several changes to the predictability and reliability of the edit tools used for GPT-4 models and Sonnet models. You should see more reliable editing behavior in this release and we will continue to improve these tools in future releases. MCP MCP support in VS Code is generally available We've have been working on expanding MCP support in VS Code for the past few months, and support the full range of MCP features in the specification . As of this release, MCP support is now generally available in VS Code! In addition, organizations can now control the availability of MCP servers with a GitHub Copilot policy. Learn more about Managing policies and features for Copilot in your enterprise in the GitHub Copilot documentation. You can get started by installing some of the popular MCP servers from our curated list . Learn more about using MCP servers in VS Code and how you can use them to extend agent mode. If you want to build your own MCP server, check our MCP developer guide for more details about how to take advantage of the MCP capabilities in VS Code. Support for elicitations The latest MCP specification added support for Elicitations as a way for MCP servers to request input from MCP clients. The latest version of VS Code adopts this specification and includes support for elicitations. MCP server discovery and installation The new MCP Servers section in the Extensions view includes welcome content that links directly to the popular MCP servers from our curated list . Visit the website to explore available MCP servers and select Install on any MCP server. This automatically launches VS Code and opens the MCP server editor that displays the server's readme and manifest information. You can review the server details and select Install to add the server to your VS Code instance. Once installed, MCP servers automatically appear in your Extensions view under the MCP SERVERS - INSTALLED section, and their tools become available in the Chat view's tools Quick Pick. This makes it easy to verify that your MCP server is working correctly and access its capabilities immediately. MCP server management view The new MCP SERVERS - INSTALLED view in the Extensions view makes it easy to monitor, configure, and control your installed MCP servers. The view lists the installed MCP servers and provides several management actions through the context menu: Start Server / Stop Server / Restart Server : Control the server's running state Disconnect Account : Remove account access from the server Show Output : View the server's output logs for troubleshooting Show Configuration : Open the server's runtime configuration Configure Model Access : Manage which language models the server can access Show Sampling Requests : View sampling requests for debugging Browse Resources : Explore resources provided by the server Uninstall : Remove the server from your VS Code instance When you select an installed MCP server, VS Code opens the MCP server editor displaying the server's readme details, manifest, and its runtime configuration. This provides an overview of the server's capabilities and current settings, making it easy to understand what the server does and how it's configured. The MCP SERVERS - INSTALLED view also provides a Browse MCP Servers... action that takes you directly to the community website, making server discovery always accessible from within VS Code. MCP servers as first class resources MCP servers are now treated as first-class resources in VS Code, similar to user tasks and other profile-specific configurations. This represents a significant architectural improvement from the previous approach where MCP servers were stored in user settings. This change makes MCP server management more robust and provides better separation of concerns between your general VS Code settings and your MCP server configurations. When you install or configure MCP servers, they're automatically stored in the appropriate profile -specific location to ensure that your main settings file stays clean and focused. Dedicated storage : MCP servers are now stored in a dedicated mcp.json file within each profile, rather than cluttering your user settings file Profile-specific : Each VS Code profile maintains its own set of MCP servers, enabling you to have different server configurations for different workflows or projects Settings Sync integration : MCP servers sync seamlessly across your devices through Settings Sync , with granular control over what gets synchronized MCP migration support With MCP servers being first-class resources and the associated change to their configuration, VS Code provides comprehensive migration support for users upgrading from the previous MCP server configuration format: Automatic detection : Existing MCP servers in settings.json are automatically detected and migrated to the new profile-specific mcp.json format Real-time migration : When you add MCP servers to user settings, VS Code immediately migrates them with a helpful notification explaining the change Cross-platform support : Migration works seamlessly across all development scenarios including local, remote, WSL, and Codespaces environments This migration ensures that your existing MCP server configurations continue to work without any manual intervention while providing the enhanced management capabilities of the new architecture. Dev Container support for MCP configuration The Dev Container configuration devcontainer.json and the Dev Container Feature configuration devcontainer-feature.json support MCP server configurations at the path customizations.vscode.mcp . When a Dev Container is created the collected MCP server configurations are written to the remote MCP configuration file mcp.json . Sample devcontainer.json configuring the Playwright MCP server: { "image" : "mcr.microsoft.com/devcontainers/typescript-node:latest" , "customizations" : { "vscode" : { "mcp" : { "servers" : { "playwright" : { "command" : "npx" , "args" : [ "@playwright/mcp@latest" ] } } } } } } Commands to access MCP resources To make working with MCP servers more accessible, we've added commands to help you manage and access your MCP configuration files: MCP: Open User Configuration - Direct access to your user-level mcp.json file MCP: Open Remote User Configuration - Direct access to your remote user-level mcp.json file These commands provide quick access to your MCP configuration files, making it easy to view and manage your server configurations directly. Quick management of MCP authentication You are now able to sign out or disconnect accounts from the MCP gear menu and quick picks. MCP view gear menu: MCP editor gear menu: MCP quick pick: The Disconnect action is shown when the account is used by either other MCP servers or extensions, while Sign Out is shown when the account is only used by the MCP server. The sign out action completely removes the account from VS Code, while disconnect only removes access to the account from the MCP server. Accessibility Keep all edits from within the editor Formerly, to accept all edits, focus would need to be in the Chat view. Now, with focus in the editor, you can run the command Keep All Edits ( ⌥⌘Y (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Alt+Y ) ). User action required sound We’ve fine-tuned the accessibility signal to indicate when chat requires user action and set the default value to auto , so screen reader users will hear this signal. You can configure this behavior with the accessibility.signals.chatUserActionRequired setting. Alert when rendering errors occur in chat Previously, screen reader users were not alerted when a chat rendering error occurred. Users are now alerted with this information and can also focus it via keyboard. Code Editing Scroll on middle click Setting : editor.scrollOnMiddleClick Scroll the editor by simply clicking, or holding down your middle mouse button (the scroll wheel) and moving around. Once activated, the cursor changes to a panning icon and moving the mouse up or down then smoothly scrolls the editor in that direction. The scrolling speed is determined by how far you move the mouse from the initial click point. Release the middle mouse button or click it again to stop scrolling and return to the standard cursor. Known Conflicts Enabling this feature might interfere with other actions tied to the middle mouse button. For example, if you have column selection ( editor.columnSelection ) enabled, holding down the middle mouse button selects text. Similarly, on Linux, selection clipboard ( editor.selectionClipboard ) pastes content from your clipboard when the middle mouse button is clicked. To avoid these conflicts, please enable only one of these settings at a time. Snooze code completions You can now temporarily pause inline suggestions and next edit suggestions (NES) by using the new Snooze feature. This is helpful when you want to focus without distraction from suggestions. To snooze suggestions, select the Copilot dashboard in the Status Bar, or run the Snooze Inline Suggestions command from the Command Palette and select a duration from the dropdown menu. During the snooze period, no inline suggestions or NES will appear. You can also assign a custom keybinding to quickly snooze suggestions for a specific duration by passing the desired duration as an argument to the command. For example: { "key" : "..." , "command" : "editor.action.inlineSuggest.snooze" , "args" : 10 } Editor Experience Windows accent color Setting : window.border VS Code on Windows now supports using the accent color as the window frame border if that is enabled in Windows settings ("Show accent color on title bars and window borders"). The new window.border setting enables you to control the color of the window border. Use default to use the Windows accent color, off to disable the border, or provide a specific color value to use a custom color. Note : the border is only visible when the related Windows setting is enabled. It can not yet be set per workspace, but we are working on that support. Settings search suggestions (Preview) Setting : workbench.settings.showAISearchToggle This milestone, we modified the sparkle toggle in the Settings editor, so that it acts as a toggle between the AI and non-AI search results. The AI settings search results are semantically similar results instead of results that are based on string matching. For example, editor.fontSize appears as an AI settings search result when you search for "increase text size". The toggle is enabled only when there are AI results available. We welcome feedback on when the AI settings search did not find an expected setting, and we plan to enable the setting by default over the next iteration. Tasks Rerun all running tasks You can now quickly rerun all currently running tasks with the new Tasks: Rerun All Running Tasks command . This is useful for workflows that involve multiple concurrent tasks, allowing you to restart them all at once without stopping and rerunning each individually. Restart task reloads updated tasks.json The Restart Task command now reloads your tasks.json before restarting, ensuring that any recent changes are respected. Previously, task configuration changes were not picked up when restarting a task, which could lead to confusion or outdated task behavior. Terminal Terminal Suggest (Preview) We've made significant improvements to the terminal suggest feature. Selection mode A new setting, terminal.integrated.suggest.selectionMode , helps you understand that by default, Tab (not Enter ) accepts suggestions. You can choose between partial , always , and never modes to control how suggestions are selected and accepted. The default value is partial , which means that Tab accepts the suggestion until navigation has occurred. Learn more The Learn More action (kb(workbench.action.terminal.suggestLearnMore)) in the terminal suggest control's status bar is now highlighted for the first 10 times or if the control is shown for 10 seconds. This helps you discover how to configure, disable, and read about the suggest control. Multi-command support Terminal suggest now supports multi-command lines. You can link commands with ; , && , and other shell operators, and receive suggestions for all commands on the line. Symlink information We now display a symlink's realpath in the suggest details control and have unique icons for symlink files and folders to help distinguish them from other suggestions. Improved sorting We've improved sorting in many ways to give you the most relevant suggestions first. For example, giving main and master priority over other branches. Git bash improvements We now properly support Git Bash path completions for folders and files. Additionally, we source the built-in commands and present them as suggestions. Contributions to extensions GitHub Pull Requests There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests extension, which enables you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. Deeper integration has been made between the GitHub Pull Requests extension and Copilot coding agent , allowing you to begin, view, and manage coding agent sessions directly from VS Code. These features require that your workspace is open to a repository that has the Copilot coding agent enabled . Review the changelog for the 0.114.0 release of the extension to learn about everything in the release. Start a coding agent session (Preview) Ask Copilot to continue a local change in the background by invoking the #copilotCodingAgent tool in chat. This tool automatically pushes pending changes to a remote branch and initiates a coding agent session from that branch along with the user's instruction. Experimental: Deeper UI integration can be enabled with the githubPullRequests.codingAgent.uiIntegration setting. Once enabled, a new Delegate to coding agent button appears in the Chat view for repositories that have the agent enabled. Status tracking We have made improvements to notify and prominently display the status of coding agent pull requests in the Copilot on my behalf query. A numeric badge now indicates new changes. Session log You can now view the session log of a coding agent session directly in VS Code. This enables you to see the history of actions taken by the coding agent, including code changes and tool usage. Enhancements on #activePullRequest tool The #activePullRequest tool returns information about the pull request, such as its title, description, and status for use in chat, and now you can also use it to get the coding agent session information. This tool is automatically attached to chat when opening a pull request created through the coding agent experience, so you can maintain the context and keep working on the pull request if needed to. Python Python Environments extension improvements The Python Environments extension received several improvements this release: We've polished terminal activation support for Poetry versions greater than 2.0.0 You can now use the Quick Create environment creation option to set up multiple virtual environments which are uniquely named within the same workspace The generated .venv folders are now git-ignored by default We've improved the environment deletion process Python Environments included as part of the Python extension We're starting to roll-out the Python Environments extension as an optional dependency with the Python extension. What this means is that you might now begin to see the Python Environments extension automatically installed alongside the Python extension, similar to the Python Debugger and Pylance extensions. This controlled roll-out allows us to gather early feedback and ensure reliability before general availability. The Python Environments extension includes all the core capabilities we've introduced so far including: one-click environment setup using Quick Create , automatic terminal activation (via "python-envs.terminal.autoActivationType" setting), and all supported UI for environment and package management . To use the Python Environments extension during the roll-out, make sure the extension is installed and add the following to your VS Code settings.json file: "python.useEnvironmentsExtension" : true Disabled PyREPL for Python 3.13 We have disabled PyREPL for Python 3.13 and above to address indentation and cursor issues in the interactive terminal. For more details, see Disable PyREPL for >= 3.13 . Pylance MCP tools (Experimental) The Pylance extension now includes several experimental MCP tools, which offer access to Pylance's documentation, import analysis, environment management, and more. These tools are currently available in the Pylance prerelease version and are still early in development. While they offer new capabilities, we know it can be challenging to call them directly today. We are actively working to make these tools easier to use and more valuable in future updates. Your feedback in the pylance-release repository is welcome as we continue to improve the experience. GitHub authentication Revamped GitHub sign-in flow This iteration, we have revamped the GitHub sign-in flow by defaulting to a loopback URL flow, rather than a flow that uses a vscode:// protocol URL. This change is to improve the reliability of the sign-in flow and to ensure that it works across all platforms, including those that do not support custom URL schemes. When you sign in with GitHub, you are now redirected to a loopback URL that looks like http://localhost:PORT/ . This allows the sign-in flow to complete successfully without relying on custom URL schemes. That said, once you land on the loopback URL, you are still redirected to a vscode:// URL to return to VS Code, however this doesn't need to resolve for the sign-in flow to complete successfully. In other words, we get the best of both worlds: a reliable sign-in flow that works across all platforms and a return to VS Code that uses the vscode:// URL scheme. While we were at it, we also gave this landing page a fresh coat of paint . In future iterations, we'll apply this new design to other sign-in experiences. Extension Authoring Allow opening files when using vscode.openFolder command Extensions that call the vscode.openFolder command can now pass filesToOpen?: UriComponents[] as options to select files to open in the workspace window that opens. Example: vscode . commands . executeCommand ( 'vscode.openFolder' , < folder uri >, { filesToOpen: [ /* files to open */ ]}); Proposed APIs Engineering CSS minification using esbuild VS Code has been using esbuild for bundling and minifying the JavaScript sources for a long time. We now also use esbuild to bundle and minify our CSS files. Strict layer checks using tsconfig.json We now use multiple tsconfig.json files to ensure our source code adheres to our target environment rules . Our CI runs npm run valid-layers-check and will fail the build if for example a type was added into a browser layer that only exists in the node runtime. vscode-bisect for sanity testing The vscode-bisect project has been around for a long time allowing to find regressions in VS Code builds (what git bisect does for git ). We added a new --sanity option that allows us to quickly go through our sanity check that is mandatory before we release a new build. Notable fixes vscode-copilot-release#6073 - Agent should not suggest && in Windows PowerShell Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @albertosantini (Alberto Santini) @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @RedCMD (RedCMD) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @tamuratak (Takashi Tamura) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @a-stewart (Anthony Stewart) : Fix typing in asyncDataTree.test.ts PR #209394 @charles7668 (charles) : Fix #215925 PR #219321 @chengluyu (Luyu Cheng) : Apply font-variation-settings to the suggestion widget (fix #199954) PR #200000 @DrSergei : Improve debug adapter capabilities checking PR #250779 @emmanuel-ferdman (Emmanuel Ferdman) : Fix launch.json reference PR #250187 @Enzo-Nunes (Enzo Nunes) : Fix line comment action for makefiles (Fixes #234464) PR #243283 @Gallaecio (Adrián Chaves) : Fix typo (an language model call → a language model call) PR #252202 @ghLcd9dG (Liu) : Update copyFiles.ts PR #250773 @heoh (HeoHeo) : Fix markdown preview scroll crawls at EOF (fix #249278) PR #251228 @hyrious (hyrious) : fix: missing translations of remote built-in extensions PR #249430 @jeanp413 (Jean Pierre) Do not check for navigator to detect web environment in built-in extensions PR #251688 Fix "Assertion Failed: Argument is undefined or null" when renaming custom editor PR #252071 @JJJJJJ-git : Fixing ChatService undo bug PR #253478 @liuxingbaoyu : fix: PowerShell not working with username having Unicode PR #251534 @matthew-godin : fix patternIndices typo PR #250085 @mohiuddin-khan-shiam (S. M. Mohiuddin Khan Shiam) : Fix incorrect SHA-1 commit regex in version_manager.rs PR #251329 @notoriousmango (Seong Min Park) feat: add font ligatures to webview theme PR #250998 feat: add rerun and debug actions for failed tests from last run PR #251679 @raffaeu (Raffaele Garofalo) : Refactoring editor sticky scroll PR #248131 @RedCMD (RedCMD) Disable installation folder banner warning when debugging extensions PR #244305 TypeScript restrict Comment onEnterRules inside comment body PR #251692 @ssigwart (Stephen Sigwart) : Update indentation for PHP, JS, and TS PR #251465 @Sublimeful (Jian Qiang Wu) : Implements Terminal: Run Recent Command when there are no terminals PR #250799 @tmm1 (Aman Karmani) : [engineering] remove dead references to Swc transpile PR #252375 @UziTech (Tony Brix) : feat: add middle mouse button scrolling PR #245882 @yiliang114 (易良) : Fix #250737, Match count result overflow in Notebook findWidget PR #250738 Contributions to vscode-copilot-chat : @caohy1988 (Hai-Yuan Cao) : update the summary prompt for agent mode PR #13 @CharlesCNorton : Update README.md PR #54 @gmacario (Gianpaolo Macario) : docs(CONTRIBUTING): sync Table of Contents PR #79 @moonboxing (ASSEMAR MOHAMED) : update devcontainer-lock after pylint removal PR #76 Contributions to vscode-json-languageservice : @aedenmurray (Aeden Murray) : feat: Notify Invalid RegExp Patterns PR #261 Contributions to vscode-pull-request-github : @dyhagho (Dyhagho Briceño) : fix: Allow Github.com auth when github-enterprise.uri is set PR #7002 Contributions to vscode-ripgrep : @benz0li (Olivier Benz) : Add linux riscv64 target PR #73 @Vector341 : Fix invalid download crash install PR #66 Contributions to vscode-test : @coliff (Christian Oliff) : Update .npmignore PR #312 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @billybonks (Sebastien Stettler) : fix: improve readability of comment, PR #2155 @rcjsuen (Remy Suen) : Add the Docker Language Server to the list PR #2153 @yangdanny97 (Danny Yang) : Add Pyrefly to language servers list PR #2160 Contributions to monaco-editor : @Ho1yShif (Shifra Williams) : Add snowflake sql keywords PR #4915 Contributions to ripgrep-prebuilt : @kxxt (Levi Zim) Build binaries for riscv64 PR #41 Publish binary for riscv64 linux PR #51 On this page there are 13 sections On this page Chat MCP Accessibility Code Editing Editor Experience Tasks Terminal Contributions to extensions Extension Authoring Proposed APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_82 | August 2023 (version 1.82) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 August 2023 (version 1.82) Update 1.82.1 : The update addresses this security issue . Update 1.82.2 : The update addresses these issues . Update 1.82.3 : The update addresses this security issue . Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the August 2023 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Accessibility improvements - Accessible View support for inline completions, updated keybindings. Built-in port forwarding - Forward local server ports from within VS Code. Sticky Scroll updates - Scrolls horizontally with editor, display last line in scope, folding UI. New diff editor features - Detect moved code, dynamically switch inline and side-by-side view. Command Center displayed by default - Quickly open files or run commands from the title bar. Copy Notebook output - Easily copy cell output as well as generated images. WebAssembly debugging - Decompile WASM code to step through and set breakpoints. New TypeScript refactorings - Move to File and Inline Variables refactorings. New Python Formatting topic - Learn how to integrate formatters such as autopep8 and Black. Preview: GitHub Copilot - CreateWorkspace command previews file structure of proposed code. If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Accessibility Focused view in window title The window.title setting now has a ${focusedView} variable that displays the name of the view in the title bar, if a view is currently focused. Accessible View for inline completions Inline completions, like those coming from the GitHub Copilot extension, for example, can now be inspected in the Accessible View . Improved navigation consistency across the workbench Last iteration, we made the experience when navigating between an input control (for example, search or filter input) and its results consistent across components like the Extensions view, the Keyboard Shortcuts editor, and more using ⌘↓ (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Down ) and ⌘↑ (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Up ) . This has been extended to the Settings editor and GitHub Pull Request comment control. This also works for navigating between the terminal and the terminal accessible buffer. Updated terminal accessible buffer keybindings Previously, the terminal accessible buffer was opened via Shift+Tab . This conflicted with an existing keyboard shortcut in some shells. As such, we've removed that keybinding in favor of ⌘↓ (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Down ) and ⌥F2 (Windows Alt+F2 , Linux Shift+Alt+F2 ) , to align with the other Accessible Views. Actions in the Accessible View Actions in the Accessible View allow screen reader users to go to next/previous , disable accessibility verbosity, and more for a given feature. These actions exist within a convenient toolbar on the view so that the current context can be preserved. Go to Symbol in the Accessible View Accessibility help dialogs and some Accessible Views now have a Go to Symbol ( ⇧⌘O (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+O ) ) action to allow for swifter navigation through content. Focus terminal accessible buffer after run The terminal now has a terminal.integrated.focusAfterRun setting so that users can specify if the terminal's accessible buffer ( accessible-buffer ), the terminal itself ( terminal ), or nothing ( none ) should be focused when Terminal: Run Selected Text In Active Terminal is invoked. Workbench Built-in port forwarding VS Code now has a built-in port forwarding system. This feature allows you to share locally running services over the internet to other people and devices. To use it, select the Forward a Port button in the Ports view available in the Panel region ( Ports: Focus on Ports View ). Theme: Codesong (preview on vscode.dev ) Read more about port forwarding in the Port Forwarding user guide. Command Center now on by default The Command Center was introduced several months ago as a quick way to both discover and interact with VS Code. You can use it as a launch pad for finding a command in the Command Palette, running a task, and other quick experiences. We've been running an experiment displaying the Command Center in the title bar and have gotten positive feedback, so we felt it was time to enable it by default. Here is a video using the Command Center, and the back and forward buttons as well. We see immense potential for the Command Center to be the center for finding anything in VS Code, so watch for more improvements in the future! Note : If you would rather not have the Command Center visible, you can right-click on the title bar and uncheck the Command Center entry in the dropdown to hide it. Control how pinned editors close from keyboard or mouse There is a new setting workbench.editor.preventPinnedEditorClose for more control on how pinned tabs respond to keyboard shortcuts or mouse middle-click for closing an editor. By default, a pinned tab will not close from keyboard or mouse interactions (default value keyboardAndMouse ). You can change this setting accordingly: keyboardAndMouse - A pinned tab will not close from keyboard shortcut or mouse middle-click (default since 1.82.x ). keyboard - A pinned tab will not close via keyboard shortcut (default until 1.81.x ). mouse - A pinned tab will not close via mouse middle-click. never - A pinned tab will always close from keyboard shortcut or mouse middle-click. New and updated themable colors for the Status bar The Status bar already provides many themable colors for its items. There are now more colors to allow for theming hover foreground and background colors: statusBarItem.errorHoverBackground statusBarItem.errorHoverForeground statusBarItem.warningHoverBackground statusBarItem.warningHoverForeground statusBarItem.remoteHoverBackground statusBarItem.remoteHoverForeground statusBarItem.offlineHoverBackground statusBarItem.offlineHoverForeground The following two color names were updated because the color no longer applies to the entire Status bar, but only to the remote indicator: statusBar.offlineBackground renamed to statusBarItem.offlineBackground statusBar.offlineForeground renamed to statusBarItem.offlineForeground Editor Sticky Scroll This iteration there have been several improvements to the Sticky Scroll UI, available at the top of the editor ( View: Toggle Sticky Scroll ). Now by default Sticky Scroll is scrolled sideways when the editor horizontal scrollbar is scrolled. This feature can be turned off by disabling editor.stickyScroll.scrollWithEditor . It is possible to view the last line of a scope by holding the Shift key and hovering over a Sticky Scroll line. Clicking on a line while holding Shift moves the editor cursor to the last line of the scope. Folding icons have been added to the Sticky Scroll gutter. The rendering of these icons follows the setting editor.showFoldingControls that controls the rendering of the folding icons in the editor gutter. Sort JSON on save It is now possible to sort JSON or JSONC (JSON with comments) files on save. Use the setting json.sortOnSave.enable to enable this feature. Code Actions and Quick Fix navigation via keyboard You can now quickly navigate through the Quick Fix, Code Actions, or Source Control menus (they use the "Action" control) by typing any keyword or letter corresponding with available menu options. The filter utilizes fuzzy matching and searches are not limited to the first letter or prefix but includes the entire label text as well. Diff Editor In this release, we enabled the new diff editor by default. We also improved some of the new diff editor features and fixed many bugs. Moved code detection This iteration we polished the moved code detection feature. It can be enabled with "diffEditor.experimental.showMoves": true or in the diff editor context menu. When enabled, code blocks that are moved from one location to a different location in the same file are detected and arrows are drawn to indicate where the code blocks moved to. Code moves are also detected when they are slightly modified. The Compare button can be used to compare the block before and after the move. Collapsed unchanged code headers Use "diffEditor.hideUnchangedRegions.enabled": true or select the map icon in the editor context menu to enable collapsing unchanged code blocks. With this release, there are now breadcrumbs for collapsed code blocks to indicate which symbols are collapsed. Clicking on a breadcrumb item reveals the selected item: Dynamic layout If the width of the diff editor is too small, the editor automatically switches to inline view. If the editor is wide enough again, the previous layout is restored. Set "diffEditor.useInlineViewWhenSpaceIsLimited": false to disable this behavior. Button toggle states We updated the toggle style of buttons in the diff editor to be more visible. Old toggle style (untoggled and toggled) with dim untoggled buttons: , New toggle style (untoggled and toggled) with shaded toggled background: , Terminal Control how terminals restore on startup The new setting terminal.integrated.hideOnStartup controls whether a terminal is automatically created when the application starts up. The following options are available: never (default): Never hide the terminal view on startup. whenEmpty : Only hide the terminal when there are no persistent sessions restored. always : Always hide the terminal, even when there are persistent sessions restored. Disable bracketed paste mode Bracketed paste mode is a feature in the terminal that wraps pasted text in special sequences so the shell can use that information. Shells that turn on this feature are meant to properly support this but there may be reasons it falls over at which point you might see text like [201~ unexpectedly when pasting. This feature can now be disabled explicitly, which disables the feature even if shells request it. Terminal focus after run setting The terminal now has a terminal.integrated.focusAfterRun setting so that users can specify if the terminal should be focused when Terminal: Run Selected Text In Active Terminal is invoked. The other options are to focus the terminal's accessible buffer ( accessible-buffer ) or leave nothing focused ( none ). Resizable Find The terminal's Find control can now be resized using the sash on the left similar to the editor: The sash is highlighted when hovering over or dragging it to resize the Find control. Faster rendering when GPU acceleration is disabled The performance of the "DOM renderer", which is used when GPU acceleration is disabled, has been significantly improved thanks to a rewrite of the component . The rewrite focused on reducing the number of DOM elements used and the savings scale much better the larger the terminal is. When testing a typical render call on a terminal with 117 columns and 36 rows, it took ~10 ms before and ~2 ms after. Increasing the terminal size to 300x100 on the test machine recorded a render taking ~25-35 ms before and ~4-5 ms after. Better selection rendering When GPU acceleration is off, selection rendering is now the same as the webgl renderer and all backgrounds are changed into the theme's selection background color to ensure good contrast and consistency. Respect half minimum contrast ratio for dimmed text The minimum contrast ratio feature allows the terminal to take more control over the foreground colors in the terminal to ensure they appear at a particular contrast ratio. One problem with this feature in the past was that dimmed text ( CSI 2 m ) would also respect the contrast ratio, meaning it could appear just as prominent as regular text. PowerShell's auto complete ghost text is an example where this didn't play nicely. Dimmed text will now have half the contrast requirements. While this means that the text may no longer meet the minimum contrast ratio, it's now obviously different from regular text, which is more important. Configure the cursor appearance when unfocused The look of the cursor in the terminal when it is not focused can now be configured with terminal.integrated.cursorStyleInactive . This supports all styles of the existing terminal.integrated.cursorStyle , plus outline (default) and none . Improved Terminal: Open Detected Link behavior The Open Detected Link command ( ⇧⌘O (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+O ) ) behavior has been changed to maintain high performance while making it much easier to search the whole terminal buffer for links. Previously, it would provide links for just the viewport and a little above with a cumbersome Show more links button at the end to search the rest of the buffer: Now links in the viewport are presented immediately, so the Quick Pick can show as soon as possible: As soon as the Quick Pick is displayed, links are detected for the rest of the terminal buffer in the background. When typing to filter, VS Code waits for all results and includes them in the filtered results: Notice that CodeQL.yml was not included until a filter was typed as it was outside the viewport. New link formats The following GNU-style link formats are now detected in terminals: sourcefile:lineno.column sourcefile:line1-column1.column2 sourcefile:line1.column1-line2.column2 Debug JavaScript Debugger WebAssembly debugging The JavaScript debugger will now automatically decompile WebAssembly modules to the WebAssembly Text Format, and allow you to step through and set breakpoints in the decompiled modules. Theme: Codesong (preview on vscode.dev ) Source map loading improvements We made many improvements to the way source maps are loaded in this release: Source maps in some common cases, like in applications compiled with the tsc command line, are loaded 3-5x faster. Hot module reloading from the Vite dev server is now supported. Source maps can now be automatically loaded from authenticated endpoints. Testing Improved status area The 'status area' below the filter box in the Testing view is now more concise, and also provides a clickable action to rerun the most recently run tests. Holding Alt while clicking on the rerun button will debug those tests instead. Support for link detection in test output Link detection now runs in the terminal where Test Output is shown. File names, paths, and URIs are now clickable. Improved experience for test-correlated output Test extensions can correlate console output with specific tests or locations. Previously, each output created in this way would appear as its own item in the Test Results view, and open in a text editor when selected. Now, they are shown in a proper terminal, and navigating to an output message opens a terminal of that test's output with the message selected. Notebooks Copy cell output The cell output menu now includes an option to copy the output to the system clipboard. The context menu can also be used for image output by right-clicking the image and selecting the Copy Output command. Theme: Bearded Theme feat. Gold D Raynh (preview on vscode.dev ) Languages TypeScript 5.2 VS Code now ships with TypeScript 5.2.2. This major update brings new TypeScript language features, better performance, and many important improvements and bug fixes. You can read about TypeScript 5.2 on the TypeScript blog . Move to file refactoring The Move to file refactoring for JavaScript and TypeScript lets you move a class, function, or constant into an existing file. This will also automatically update all references to the symbol and update imports as needed: When you select Move to file , VS Code shows you a list of all files in the current TypeScript or JavaScript project. You can start typings to quickly filter to the file you want. Alternatively, you can use Select existing file... to select a file using the normal file picker or Enter new file path... to specify a new file that should be created. Inline variable refactoring The Inline variable refactoring for JavaScript and TypeScript replaces all occurrences of a variable with its constant value. This refactoring is often most useful when rewriting existing code. For example, when a variable ends up being declared and then immediately returned, you can use inline variable to remove the extra declaration and return the value directly: function add ( a , b ) { const result = a + b ; return result ; } After running inline variable on result : function add ( a , b ) { return a + b ; } Clickable parameter hints You can now click on parameter hints to quickly jump to the parameter declaration. After turning on inlay hints using: "editor.inlayHints.enabled" : "on" , "typescript.inlayHints.parameterNames.enabled" : "all" , "javascript.inlayHints.parameterNames.enabled" : "all" hold down Ctrl/Cmd and click on the parameter name to jump to that parameter's declaration: We plan to enable Go to Definition for other JavaScript and TypeScript inlay hints in upcoming releases. Remote Development The Remote Development extensions , allow you to use a Dev Container , remote machine via SSH or Remote Tunnels , or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. Highlights include: Better Remote - Tunnels connection reliability. New Install Docker in WSL command. Prebuild Dev Containers instructional guide. You can learn about new extension features and bug fixes in the Remote Development release notes . Contributions to extensions GitHub Copilot Create workspaces from the Chat view You can now use /createWorkspace to create workspaces from a natural language description in the stable build of the GitHub Copilot Chat extension. We've also made the following improvements: Proposed workspaces are now rendered as file trees in the chat response. You can click into files to open a readonly preview in the editor. If Copilot's initial proposal wasn't quite right, you can ask follow-up questions to help Copilot iterate and improve. Start coding in untitled editor with inline chat There is now a hint for how to start an inline chat session via ⌘I (Windows, Linux Ctrl+I ) when you open an untitled text editor. Screen reader users can hear this hint and choose to disable it with the accessibility.verbosity.untitledHint setting. Improvements to Quick Chat We introduced Quick Chat a couple of months ago and have been iterating quickly to provide an experience that feels made for VS Code. Highlights this iteration: More compact UX. Quick Chat now stays open when focus is lost. Sash and "scroll-to-grow" behavior to resize window. Open Quick Chat now in the Command Center. Overall, the UX is more compact to align with other "Quick Open" experiences like the Command Palette (less padding everywhere, user and Copilot icons are smaller, buttons are inline instead of being in a title bar). By default, when you ask a question, the Quick Chat resizes to focus on that question and answer to minimize screen real estate. We also think it helps focus on those quick questions that you might want to ask Copilot. The history of your conversation is still available and you can scroll up to go back in time. Because of this dynamic height, we also wanted to provide a way to resize the window if you need more or less space. There are two options to adjust the window size. The first is what we call "scroll-to-grow." If your Quick Chat window is small from a small answer, but you'd like to see a previous long answer, as you scroll up, the Quick Chat grows to a max height. The height of the Quick Chat can be reset back to showing only the last question and answer by doing one of the following: Closing the Quick Chat and waiting 30 seconds. Asking another question or running /clear (keep in mind, /clear clears your chat history for good). Double-clicking on the bottom sash. Speaking of the sash... we also have a sash at the bottom of the Quick Chat that can be used for manually adjusting the height of the Quick Chat. When you use the sash, you're opting out of the default dynamic behavior and are saying "I want this height to be fixed here until reset." Note : If you want to go back to the dynamic behavior, double-click the sash or type /clear in the chat ( /clear clears your chat history). Last but not least, you can launch Quick Chat from the Command Center with the Open Quick Chat option. Explain terminal selection Copilot now has the ability to explain the current terminal selection by selecting Copilot: Explain This in the terminal's context menu ( Right-click or Shift + Right-click depending on the platform). The Copilot: Explain This command will bring up the Chat view, where Copilot will return a detailed explanation. Natural language search for settings The Settings editor now allows natural language search with GitHub Copilot Chat . The natural language search results are currently placed below keyword-matching results and ordered by descending similarity score, but we plan to fix the ordering next month so that the search results continue to be arranged by their table of contents group. Natural language search currently relies on Copilot embeddings. Consequently, natural language search results will not show up in the Settings editor for searches made before the embeddings become available, that is a few seconds after the GitHub Copilot Chat extension activates. Theme: Light Pink (preview on vscode.dev ) Python New Python Formatting article There is a new dedicated topic on Python Formatting , where you'll learn how to set a default formatter such as autopep8 or Black and customize it through various settings. Terminal activation using environment variables The Python extension now has a new activation mechanism that activates the selected environment in the terminal without running any explicit activation commands. This month, we are beginning to roll this out as an experiment, making it the default experience. With the new approach, we use environment variables to activate terminals, which is done implicitly on terminal launch and can thus be quicker, especially for conda environments. You can add the following User setting: "python.experiments.optInto": ["pythonTerminalEnvVarActivation"] to try it out. If you have any comments or suggestions regarding this experiment, feel free to share them in vscode-python issue #11039 . Recreate or use existing .venv environment When working within a workspace that already contains a .venv folder, the Python: Create Environment command has been updated with options to either recreate or use the existing environment. If you decide to recreate the environment, your current .venv is deleted, allowing you to recreate a new environment named .venv . You can then customize this new environment by following the Python: Create Environment flow to select your preferred interpreter and specify any dependency files for installation. In the case the environment cannot be deleted, for example, due to it being active, you are prompted to delete the environment manually. Alternatively, if you choose to use the existing environment, the environment is selected for your workspace. Preview Features Quick Access text search We are experimenting with showing workspace search results in a Quick Access menu. To try this, run Search: Quick Text Search (Experimental) . This command sets up the Quick Open to accept search queries. Type some text to see matches from different workspace files. Dim unfocused editors and terminals There's a new experimental feature to dim editors and terminals that are not currently focused. The goal of this feature is to make it much clearer where text will go compared to the typical blinking cursor. The image above shows the dim unfocused feature enabled with opacity set to 0.5 so that it is clearer that the editor for terminalService.ts has focus. This can be enabled using accessibility.dimUnfocused.enabled and the amount of dimming is controlled with accessibility.dimUnfocused.opacity . The feature only covers editors and terminals currently but the plan is to expand this to allow a user to configure what views they want to dim themselves. Extension authoring Support for batch range formatting The DocumentRangeFormattingEditProvider API now supports batch formatting. This means that an extension can optionally signal to the editor that it supports being called with multiple ranges at once. This helps reduce the number of calls to the formatting provider and thus improves performance. To opt in to batch formatting, providers must implement a new optional function: provideDocumentRangesFormattingEdits . EnvironmentVariableCollection's scoped to a workspace folder The EnvironmentVariableCollection API now supports creating a new collection that is scoped to a particular workspace folder and will apply in addition to the "global" collection. // Get a scoped collection for the first workspace folder const scoped = context . environmentVariableCollection . getScoped ({ workspaceFolder: workspace . workspaceFolders [ 0 ] }); scoped . replace ( 'SCOPED' , '1' ); // Only terminals created in the first workspace folder will have SCOPED=1 set The Python extension uses this mechanism to set up different virtual environments depending on which folder a terminal belongs to in a multi-root workspace. Configure when a EnvironmentVariableMutator is applied The EnvironmentVariableCollection API now has the ability to apply changes inside the shell integration script that will run after shell initialization scripts. This will only work when shell integration is enabled so the change can be applied both at shell creation and inside shell integration if it's critical: context . environmentVariableCollection . prepend ( 'PATH' , '/my/custom/path' , { applyAtProcessCreation: true , applyAtShellIntegration: true }); This feature is useful when the variable in question could be mutated by a shell initialization script. Proposed APIs Every milestone comes with new proposed APIs and extension authors can try them out. As always, we want your feedback. Here are the steps to try out a proposed API: Find a proposal that you want to try and add its name to package.json#enabledApiProposals . Use the latest @vscode/dts and run npx @vscode/dts dev . It will download the corresponding d.ts files into your workspace. You can now program against the proposal. You cannot publish an extension that uses a proposed API. There may be breaking changes in the next release and we never want to break existing extensions. A contextValue on TestMessage's and contribution points You can provide a contextValue on TestMessage s to be shown when users take actions on those messages. Additionally, two new menu contributions points are available, testing/message/context and testing/message/content . The former is displayed on the message in the Test Results tree view, and the latter is displayed over the message in the editor. Read more about contextValue in issue #190277 . Terminal context menu contributions Two new menus are being proposed that allow extensions to integrate their own context menu actions into the terminal: terminal/context - The terminal context menu terminal/title/context - The terminal tabs context menu Listen to terminal command execution An early proposal for the long requested ability for extensions to listen to the terminal command execution API is available for testing. This API is implemented using shell integration and will only fire on terminals that have it enabled and working. export interface TerminalExecutedCommand { /** * The { @link Terminal } the command was executed in. */ terminal : Terminal ; /** * The full command line that was executed, including both the command and the arguments. */ commandLine : string | undefined ; /** * The current working directory that was reported by the shell. This will be a { @link Uri } * if the string reported by the shell can reliably be mapped to the connected machine. */ cwd : Uri | string | undefined ; /** * The exit code reported by the shell. */ exitCode : number | undefined ; /** * The output of the command when it has finished executing. This is the plain text shown in * the terminal buffer and does not include raw escape sequences. Depending on the shell * setup, this may include the command line as part of the output. */ output : string | undefined ; } export namespace window { /** * An event that is emitted when a terminal with shell integration activated has completed * executing a command. * * Note that this event will not fire if the executed command exits the shell, listen to * { @link onDidCloseTerminal } to handle that case. */ export const onDidExecuteTerminalCommand : Event < TerminalExecutedCommand >; } The shape of this API is not final but the basic idea will remain the same. Here's an example usage that listens for any successful git push command and triggers a refresh in the extension: const disposables = []; disposables . push ( window . onDidExecuteTerminalCommand ( command => { if ( command . commandLine . startsWith ( 'git push' ) && command . exitCode === 0 ) { refreshState (); } }) ); function refreshState () { /* ... */ } Terminal selection access A simple proposed API to access the terminal selection: export interface Terminal { /** * The selected text of the terminal or undefined if there is no selection. */ readonly selection : string | undefined ; } This API will likely include a corresponding change event before it's finalized and the API name may change to make it clearer that it's a simple string and not Range -based like TextEditor.selection . Terminal Quick Fix progress The terminal Quick Fix proposal can now trigger a regular VS Code command, as opposed to a terminal command. This change necessitated also changing the terminal command interface name: export interface TerminalQuickFixProvider { /** * Provides terminal quick fixes * @param commandMatchResult The command match result for which to provide quick fixes * @param token A cancellation token indicating the result is no longer needed * @return Terminal quick fix(es) if any */ provideTerminalQuickFixes ( commandMatchResult : TerminalCommandMatchResult , token : CancellationToken ): ProviderResult < SingleOrMany < TerminalQuickFixExecuteTerminalCommand | TerminalQuickFixOpener | Command > >; } export class TerminalQuickFixExecuteTerminalCommand { /** * The terminal command to run */ terminalCommand : string ; constructor ( terminalCommand : string ); } Engineering Electron 25 update In this milestone, we are promoting the Electron 25 update to our stable users. This update comes with Chromium 114.0.5735.289 and Node.js 18.15.0 . We want to thank everyone who self-hosted on Insiders builds and provided early feedback. Update highlights for Node.js Node.js bundled in our desktop application and standalone executable bundled with our servers are updated from v16 -> v18. Given that this is a major version bump, there are a couple of behavior and compatibility changes: DNS result orders from the OS are no longer sorted. We have added --dns-result-order=ipv4first to our extension host in both local and server scenarios to avoid breaking extensions that might not have yet adopted this change. Moving forward, we recommend that extensions use the autoSelectFamily option in socket.connect API to accommodate the result order changes. Prebuilt binaries from the official Node.js repo for Linux are now compatible with Linux distributions based on glibc 2.28 or later. This would mean dropping support from our servers for Ubuntu 18, CentOS 7, RHEL 7, etc. We are now shipping a custom build of Node.js for our Linux servers to maintain glibc 2.17 or later compatibility. This support will change in future updates when we are no longer capable of building newer Node.js versions on CentOS 7 images, so we advice our server users to update their OS versions if they are affected by this change. Update highlights for Chromium After Mesa version updates, Chromium shader compilation can be broken leading to artifacts in application UI. The issue is tracked in issue #190437 , which also contains the link to the Chromium bug report. You can identify this issue by running with --verbose and looking for the following line ERROR:shared_context_state.cc(81)] Skia shader compilation error in the logs. If you are affected by this issue, the current workaround is to delete the GPU cache located at ~/.config/Code/GPUCache . When Chromium uses the SwiftShader backend for webgl, it seems to have regressed performance on both Windows and Linux for our integrated terminal. As a workaround, we detect the affected users based on the GL_RENDERER string and switch to the DOM backend for the terminal. Additional details can be found in issue #190195 , which also contains link to the Chromium bug report. Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @starball5 (starball) @ArturoDent (ArturoDent) @rperez030 (Roberto Perez) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @0o001 (Mustafa Ateş Uzun) : fix: localize string typo PR #191046 @alphacoma18 (Alpha Romer Coma) : Fix supported markdown-lint violations in markdown files PR #190750 @andyleejordan (Andy Jordan) : Guard $IsWindows PR #190192 @bandantonio (Antonio) : fix: add missing pricing parameter to manifest schema PR #190293 @ChaseKnowlden (Chase Knowlden) :Append the focused view in the window title PR #190216 @davedash (Dave Dash) : Fish integration: Use -- in string to signify beginning of positional… PR #189994 @demccormack (Daniel McCormack) : Fix zsh and bash shell integration when using set -u PR #185425 @floge07 : fix: allow underscore as a valid char in tunnel remote address PR #190904 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) : Fix recently-broken cleanup of obsolete (superseded) extension folders PR #189335 @greenie (Joe Green) : Fix scroll to top button colour consistency PR #191034 @hrkw00 (Ryosuke Hirakawa) : Fix comment typo in standaloneLanguages.ts PR #189449 @hsfzxjy (hsfzxjy) Add context key notebookEditorCursorAtLineBoundary PR #187679 Always respect non-empty selection in getMultiSelectedEditorContexts PR #187704 Ensure the concurrency safety of TestResultsViewContent.reveal PR #189756 Make CommentThread Ctrl+Arrow navigible PR #189913 Fix overflow of setting list PR #190721 Fix nested list style in Markdown preview PR #190936 @jeanp413 (Jean Pierre) Fix continuation for configured default shell not used when reconnecting to Codespace PR #181832 Fix free port quick fix does not work on Windows PR #190900 @kfrederix (Karel Frederix) : wrap handler for resize observer in requestAnimationFrame() PR #183325 @kon72 (Kon) : Add commands for collapsing/showing all unchanged regions PR #190451 @lucasMarioza : Ensure style element is added to shadowDOM components on colorizeElement PR #190505 @neeleshb (Neelesh Bodas) Adding empty alt text to decorative images for extensions PR #190607 Remove incorrect role from the title bar. PR #190608 @rehmsen (Ole) : Increase shortcut consistency of web with electron. PR #191061 @SevenOutman (Doma) : Add "Peek Call Hierarchy" and "Peek Type Hierarchy" actions to Command Palette PR #189607 @songlinn : fix: prevent history show prev/next in composing event PR #184014 @timar07 (Timothy) : fix: xterm quick fix appears in wrong spot #169162 PR #188693 @Timmmm (Tim Hutt) Update dev container node version PR #190346 Support . as a row:column separator in terminal link detector PR #190351 @tisilent (YAYA 刘玉婷) fix:Terminal find widget adjustment PR #179398 Find with selected values when reveal TerminalFind PR #190466 @troy351 : listWidget: remove redundant logic PR #191054 @weartist (Hans) Fix #185343 PR #185421 Add setting to prevent closing the pinned tab when using middle click (fix #115734) PR #188592 Fix: #188760 PR #189259 Fix: #188751 PR #189616 support click on "hidden lines" text to unfold #186406 PR #189657 immediately search after enter pressed in files to include/exclude te… PR #190473 add custom hover for quick open title bar buttons PR #191416 @zardoy (Vitaly) : typescript Better paths matching for move to existing file quickpick PR #181231 Contributions to vscode-css-languageservice : @bentorkington : fix reference to deprecated method PR #359 Contributions to vscode-hexeditor : @lorsanta : Add fp16 and bf16 support in data inspector PR #451 Contributions to vscode-js-debug : @sunilsurana (Sunil Surana) : Speed up sourcemap lookups by checking existence of .map files PR #1780 Contributions to vscode-pull-request-github : @tobbbe (Tobbe) : Sanitize slashes from title PR #5149 Contributions to vscode-vsce : @bandantonio (Antonio) feat: add user-friendly info to --help PR #884 feat: add support for packaging and publishing without license file PR #887 rephrase error message for mismatched pricing values in manifest PR #890 On this page there are 16 sections On this page Accessibility Workbench Editor Diff Editor Terminal Debug Testing Notebooks Languages Remote Development Contributions to extensions Preview Features Extension authoring Proposed APIs Engineering Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_103 | July 2025 (version 1.103) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 July 2025 (version 1.103) Release date: August 7, 2025 Update 1.103.1 : The update adds GPT-5 prompt improvements , support for GPT-5 mini , and addresses these issues . Update 1.103.2 : The update addresses these issues . Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the July 2025 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: MCP Revamped tool picker experience (Show more) Enable more than 128 tools per agent request (Show more) Chat Use GPT-5 in VS Code (Show more) Restore to a previous good state with chat checkpoints (Show more) Productivity Check out multiple branches simultaneously with Git worktrees (Show more) Manage coding agent sessions in a dedicated view (Show more) If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Download Insiders In this update Chat MCP Accessibility Editor Experience Notebooks Source Control Terminal Languages Contributions to extensions Extension Authoring Proposed APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Navigation End --> Chat GPT 5 availability Starting today, GPT-5 is rolling out to all paid GitHub Copilot plans. GPT-5 is OpenAI's most capable model yet, bringing new advances in reasoning, coding, and chat. Learn more about the GPT-5 model availability in the GitHub Changelog . Open the Chat view and choose GPT-5 from the model picker to start using it for your chat conversations in VS Code. Learn more about using language models in VS Code . Update 1.103.1 : This update adds significant prompt improvements to further enhance the quality and performance of the model. GPT 5 mini availability Update 1.103.1 Starting from this release, GPT-5 mini is rolling out to all GitHub Copilot plans. GPT-5 mini is OpenAI's faster, more cost-efficient variant of GPT-5. Learn more about the GPT-5 mini model availability in the GitHub Changelog . Chat checkpoints Setting : chat.checkpoints.enabled We've introduced checkpoints that enable you to restore different states of your chat conversations. You can easily revert edits and go back to certain points in your chat conversation. This can be particularly useful if multiple files were changed in a chat session. When you select a checkpoint, VS Code reverts workspace changes and the chat history to that point. After restoring a checkpoint, you can redo that action as well! Checkpoints will be enabled by default and can be controlled with chat.checkpoints.enabled . Tool picker improvements We've totally revamped the tool picker this iteration and adopted a new component called Quick Tree to display all the tools. Notable features: Expand or collapse Configuration options moved to the title bar Sticky scrolling Icon rendering Let us know what you think! Tool grouping (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.virtualTools.threshold The maximum number of tools that you can use for a single chat request is currently 128. Previously, you could quickly reach this limit by installing MCP servers with many tools, requiring you to deselect some tools in order to proceed. In this release of VS Code, we have enabled an experimental tool-calling mode for when the number of tools exceeds the maximum limit. Tools are automatically grouped and the model is given the ability to activate and call groups of tools. This behavior, including the threshold, is configurable via the setting github.copilot.chat.virtualTools.threshold . Terminal auto-approve improvements Setting : chat.tools.terminal.autoApprove Early terminal auto-approve settings were introduced last month. This release, the feature got many improvements. Learn more about terminal auto-approval in our documentation. We merged the allowList and denyList settings into the chat.tools.terminal.autoApprove setting. If you were using the old settings, you should see a warning asking you to migrate to the new setting. Regular expression matchers now support flags. This allows case insensitivity, for example in PowerShell, where case often doesn't matter: "chat.tools.terminal.autoApprove" : { // Deny any `Remove-Item` command, regardless of case "/^Remove-Item \\ b/i" : false } There was some confusion around how the sub-command matching works, this is now explained in detail in the setting's description, but we also support matching against the complete command line. "chat.tools.terminal.autoApprove" : { // Deny any _command line_ containing a reference to what is likely a PowerShell script "/ \\ .ps1 \\ b/i" : { "approve" : false , "matchCommandLine" : true } } The auto approve reasoning is now logged to the Terminal Output channel. We plan to surface this in the UI soon . Input request detection for terminals and tasks When you run a task or terminal command in agent mode, the agent now detects when the process requests user input. You will be prompted to respond in chat, with the default or first option surfaced as the primary action and other options available in a dropdown. This works for scripts and commands that require multiple confirmations, across all supported shells and both foreground and background terminals. If you type in the terminal while a prompt is present, the prompt will hide automatically. When options and descriptions are provided (such as [Y] Yes [N] No ), these are surfaced in the confirmation prompt. In the below example, a script containing multiple prompts for user input is run via the agent. Confirmation prompts appear and I accept the actions, allowing the terminal script to finish running and the agent to provide a summary of what transpired. Improved error detection for tasks with problem matchers For tasks that use problem matchers, the agent now collects and surfaces errors based on the problem matcher results, rather than relying on the language model to evaluate output. Problems are presented in a dropdown within the chat progress message, allowing you to navigate directly to the problem location. This ensures that errors are reported only when relevant to the current task execution. Compound task support in agent mode Agent mode now supports running compound tasks. When you run a compound task, the agent indicates progress and output for each dependent task, including any prompts for user input. This enables more complex workflows and better visibility into multi-step task execution. In the example below, the VS Code - Build task is run. Output is assessed for each dependency task and a problem is surfaced to the user in the response and in the progress message dropdown. Accessibility: Focus chat confirmation action We've added a command, Focus Chat Confirmation (kb(workbench.action.chat.focusConfirmation)) , which will focus the confirmation dialog, if any, or announce to screen reader users that confirmation is not required. Track progress with task lists (Experimental) Setting : chat.todoListTool.enabled The great thing about agent mode is that you can give it a high-level task and have it implement it. As it plans the work and breaks it down into smaller tasks, it can be overwhelming to track the progress of all these individual tasks. This milestone, we are introducing the task/todo list feature in chat to better help you see which tasks are completed and which ones are still pending. You can view the task list at the top of the Chat view, so you always have visibility into the progress being made. As the agent progresses through its work, it updates the task list. Get started by giving the agent a high-level task and ask it to track its work in a todo list! This feature is still experimental and you can enable it with the chat.todoListTool.enabled setting. Improved model management experience This iteration, we've revamped the chat provider API, which is responsible for language model access. Users are now able to select which models appear in their model picker, creating a more personalized and focused experience. We plan to finalize this new API in the coming months and would appreciate any feedback. Finalization of this API will open up the extension ecosystem to implement their own model providers and further expand the bring your own key offering. Azure DevOps repos remote index support The #codebase tool now supports remote indexes for workspaces that are linked to Azure DevOps repos. This enables #codebase to search for relevant snippets almost instantly without any initialization. This even works for larger repos with tens of thousands of indexable files. Previously, this feature only worked with GitHub linked repos. Remote indexes are used automatically when working in a workspace that is linked to Azure DevOps through git. Make sure you are also logged into VS Code with the Microsoft account you use to access the Azure DevOps repos. We're gradually rolling out support for this feature on the services side, so not every organization might be able to use it initially. Based on the success of the rollout, we hope to turn on remote indexing for Azure DevOps for as many organizations as possible. Improved reliability and performance of the run in terminal and task tools We have migrated the tools for running tasks and commands within the terminal from the Copilot extension into the core microsoft/vscode repository . This gives the tools access to lower-level and richer APIs, allowing us to fix many of the terminal hanging issues. This update also comes with the benefit of more easily implementing features going forward, as we're no longer restricted to the capabilities of the extension API, especially any changes that need custom UI within the Chat view. Output polling for tasks and terminals The agent now waits for tasks and background terminals to complete before proceeding by using output polling. If a process takes longer than 20 seconds, you are prompted to continue waiting or move on. The agent will monitor the process for up to two minutes, summarizing the current state or reporting if the process is still running. This improves reliability when running long or error-prone commands in chat. Task awareness improvement Previously, the agent could only monitor active tasks. Now, it can track and analyze the output of both active and completed tasks, including those that have failed or finished running. This enhancement enables better troubleshooting and more comprehensive insights into task execution history. Agent awareness of user created terminals The agent now maintains awareness of all user-created terminals in the workspace. This enables it to track recent commands and access terminal output, providing better context for assisting with terminals and troubleshooting. Terminal inline chat improvements Terminal inline chat now better detects your active shell, even when working within subshells (for example, launching Python or Node from PowerShell or zsh). This dynamic shell detection improves the accuracy of inline chat responses by providing more relevant command suggestions for your current shell type. Improved test runner tool The test runner tool has been reworked. It now shows progress inline within chat, and numerous bugs in the tool have been fixed. Edit previous requests Setting : chat.editRequests Last iteration, we enabled users to edit previous requests and rolled out a few different access points. This iteration, we've made inline edits the default behavior. Click on the request bubble to begin editing that request. You can modify attachments, change the mode and model, and resend your request with modified text. You can control the chat editing behavior with the chat.editRequests setting if you prefer editing via the toolbar hovers above each request. Open chat as maximized Setting : workbench.secondarySideBar.defaultVisibility We added two extra options for configuring the default visibility of the Secondary Side Bar to open it as maximized: maximizedInWorkspace : open the Chat view as maximized when opening a new workspace maximized : open the Chat view always as maximized, including in empty windows Pending chat confirmation To help prevent accidentally closing a workspace where an agent session is actively changing files or responding to your request, we now show a dialog when you try to quit VS Code or close its window when a chat response is in progress: OS notification on user action Setting : chat.notifyWindowOnConfirmation We now leverage the OS native notification system to show a toast when user confirmation is needed within a chat session. Enable this behavior with the chat.notifyWindowOnConfirmation . We plan to improve this experience in the future to allow for displaying more information and for allowing you to approve directly from the toast. For now, selecting the toast focuses the window where the confirmation originated from. Math support in chat (Preview) Setting : chat.math.enabled Chats now have initial support for rendering mathematical equations in responses: This feature is powered by KaTeX and supports both inline and block math equations. Inline math equations can be written by wrapping the markup in single dollar signs ( $...$ ), while block math equations use two dollar signs ( $$...$$ ). Math rendering can be enabled using chat.math.enabled . Currently, it is off by default but we plan to enable it in a future release, after further testing. Context7 integration for project scaffolding (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.newWorkspace.useContext7 When you scaffold a new project with #new in chat, you can now make sure that it uses the latest documentation and APIs from Context7 , if you have already installed the Context7 MCP server. MCP Server autostart and trust Setting : chat.mcp.autostart Previously, when you added or updated an MCP server configuration, VS Code would show a blue "refresh" icon in the Chat view, enabling you to manually refresh the list of tools. In the milestone, you can now configure the auto-start behavior for MCP servers, so you no longer have to manually restart the MCP server. Use the chat.mcp.autostart setting to control this behavior. You can also change this setting within the icon's tooltip and see which servers will be started: The first time an MCP server is started after being updated or changed, we now show a dialog asking you to trust the server. Giving trust to these servers is particularly important with autostart turned on to prevent running undesirable commands unknowingly. Learn more about using MCP servers in VS Code in our documentation. Client credentials flow for remote MCP servers The ideal flow for a remote MCP server that wants to support authentication is to use an auth provider that supports Dynamic Client Registration (DCR). This enables the client (VS Code) to register itself with that auth provider, so the auth flow is seamless. However, not every auth provider supports DCR, so we introduced a client-credentials flow that enables you to supply your own client ID and (optionally) client secret that will be used when taking you through the auth provider's auth flow. Here's what that looks like: Step 1: VS Code detects that DCR can't be used, and asks if you want to do the client credentials flow: IMPORTANT : At this point, you would go to the auth provider's website and manually create an application registration. There you will put in the redirect URIs mentioned in the modal dialog. Step 2: From the auth provider's portal, you will get a client ID and maybe a client secret. You'll put the client ID in the input box that appears and hit Enter : Step 3: Then you'll put in the client secret if you have one, and hit Enter (leave blank if you don't have one) At that point, you'll be taken through the typical auth flow to authenticate the MCP server you're working with. Remove dynamic auth provider from Account menu Since the addition of remote MCP authentication, there has been a command available in the Command Palette called Authentication: Remove Dynamic Authentication Providers , which enables you to remove client credentials (client ID and, if available, a client secret) and all account information associated with that provider. We've now exposed this command in the Account menu. You can find it inside of an MCP server account: or at the root of the menu if you don't have any MCP server accounts yet: Support for resource_link and structured output VS Code now fully supports the latest MCP specification, version 2025-06-18 , with support for resource_link s and structured output in tool results. Accessibility Accessible chat elicitations When the agent prompts for user input, such as whether to keep waiting for a process, the chat elicitation is now accessible to screen readers. You are alerted when the prompt appears, can navigate to it with the keyboard, and can review the message in the accessible view. Control file opening for chat edits A new setting, accessibility.openChatEditedFiles , lets you choose whether files are automatically opened as the agent edits them in chat. Enable this setting for more control over which files appear in your editor. View all and previous edits commands The View All Edits and View Previous Edits commands are now available throughout the editor, making it easy to review changes made by the agent. These commands are especially helpful when accessibility.openChatEditedFiles is disabled, allowing you to track edits without opening each file. Side Bar visibility announcements When the Primary or Secondary Side Bar is shown or hidden, an ARIA announcement now notifies you of this change. This improves accessibility by ensuring screen reader users are aware of Side Bar visibility updates. Accessibility testing with Playwright We have added automated accessibility tests for the editor using Playwright. These tests help us continuously validate that Visual Studio Code meets accessibility standards and best practices, ensuring a better experience for all users. Editor Experience Settings search suggestions The AI search results toggle in the search box of the Settings editor, indicated by a sparkle, is now available for all users. The toggle is enabled when AI search results have loaded and are available. Pressing the toggle switches between the AI and non-AI search results. The AI settings search results are based on semantic similarity instead of string matching. For example, editor.fontSize appears as an AI settings search result when you search for "increase text size". Editor tab context menu We cleaned up the editor tab context menu to group related options for splitting and moving into a submenu: AI statistics (Preview) Setting : editor.aiStats.enabled We added an experimental feature for displaying basic AI statistics. Use the editor.aiStats.enabled to enable this feature, which is disabled by default. This feature shows you, per project, the percentage of characters that was inserted by AI versus inserted by typing. It also keeps track of how many inline and next edit suggestions you accepted during the current day. Notebooks Notebook inline chat with agent tools Setting : inlineChat.notebookAgent The notebook inline chat control can now use the full suite of notebook agent tools to enable additional capabilities like running cells and installing packages into the kernel. To enable agent tools in notebooks, enable the new experimental setting inlineChat.notebookAgent . This also currently requires enabling the setting for inline chat v2 inlineChat.enableV2 . Install dependencies in Virtual Environments created with uv We now support installing required dependencies when you run Jupyter Notebooks against a Virtual Environment created using uv . Source Control Git worktree support Setting : git.detectWorktrees To address a long-standing feature request , this milestone we have added Git worktree support. Worktrees let you check out multiple branches at once, making it easy to test changes or work in parallel without switching contexts. When opening a folder or workspace that contains a git repository, we now automatically detect worktrees and display them in the Source Control Repositories view. You can now view, create, delete, and open worktrees in a new or current window by using commands available from the Command Palette or Source Control Repositories view. You can disable this functionality by toggling the git.detectWorktrees setting. Repositories view The Source Control Repositories view displays all source control providers that were discovered in the current folder/workspace. This milestone, we have updated the rendering of the view in order to visually distinguish between repositories, submodules, and worktrees. We also show the parent-child relationship between repositories, submodules and worktrees. Terminal Documentation support in terminal suggest Terminal suggestions powered by language servers (LSP) now include inline documentation, similar to what you see in the editor. Starting with the Python REPL, you'll get helpful descriptions and usage details for commands as you type. You currently need these settings to enable LSP suggestions in the terminal: python.terminal.shellIntegration.enabled python.analysis.supportAllPythonDocuments Voice dictation Now that natural language input is supported in terminals, including those enabled by the Gemini and Claude extensions, we have reintroduced voice dictation in the terminal. You can start or stop dictation by using the Terminal: Start Dictation in Terminal and Terminal: Stop Dictation in Terminal commands. Improved shell integration diagnostics Shell integration is the foundation that many features in the integrated terminal are built upon such as sticky scroll , quick fixes and agent mode's ability to understand what's happening inside the terminal. This release features some improved diagnostics when you hover the terminal and select Show Details . You should now see the detected shell type and current working directory: This is one of the first places to look if one of these rich features isn't working as expected. Languages Python Shell integration support for Python 3.13 and above We now support shell integration for Python when using version 3.13 or later. When enabled, PyREPL is automatically disabled to ensure compatibility. You can disable shell integration if you prefer to continue using PyREPL. Python Environments extension improvements The Python Environments Extension continued to receive bug fixes and improvements as part of the controlled roll-out to stable users. To use the Python Environments extension during the roll-out, make sure the extension is installed and add the following to your VS Code settings.json file: "python.useEnvironmentsExtension": true . TypeScript 5.9 VS Code now includes TypeScript 5.9.2. This major update brings a few new language improvements, including support for import defer , along with tooling improvements such as improved docs for many DOM apis . Check out the TypeScript 5.9 release blog for more details on this update. Expandable hovers for JavaScript and TypeScript When you hover over a symbol in JavaScript or TypeScript, VS Code tries to show the most useful IntelliSense type information about that symbol. Types can be very complex, so one challenge for us has been trying to find the right balance between showing enough details to be useful, while not showing so much info that it becomes overwhelming. It's hard to come up with a good one size fits all approach, and also the level of type detail you want might change depending on what you are working on. That's why this iteration, we've added new UI that gives you more control over how types are shown in hovers. When you hover over a symbol, now you can select the little + icon on the left side of the hover control to expand the interfaces and complex types in the hover into their components. For example, you can use this to see the properties of an interface directly in the hover: Hovers can be expanded multiple times, which recursively expands types from the previous expansion. If you ever expand too much, just select the - icon to go back to the previous level. Also keep in mind that not every type is expandable and that we still need some limits on just how much expansion we can support. Let us know if there are any cases where expandable hovers aren't working how you'd like. Contributions to extensions GitHub Pull Requests There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests extension, which enables you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. Review the changelog for the 0.116.0 release of the extension to learn about everything in the release. Pull request header cleanup We've simplified the button bar in the pull request description header. The copy actions are now in the right-click context menu of the PR link. Show coding agent PRs in chat Setting : githubPullRequests.codingAgent.uiIntegration When you start a coding agent session (via #copilotCodingAgent or with the Delegate to coding agent action), the pull request is rendered as a card in the Chat view. Enable the githubPullRequests.codingAgent.uiIntegration setting to enable the new Delegate to coding agent button in the Chat view, for repositories that have the agent enabled. Chat sessions (Experimental) Coding agent chats Building off last iteration's Copilot coding agent integration , you can now manage a coding agent session from a dedicated chat editor. This enables you to follow the progress of the coding agent, provide follow-up instructions, and see the agent's responses in a dedicated chat editor. Start a coding agent session from VS Code with the #copilotCodingAgent tool or via the UI controls . Follow the progress of coding agent in an attached chat editor. Provide follow-up instructions directly from chat. Chat sessions view Setting : chat.agentSessionsViewLocation Enable the chat.agentSessionsViewLocation setting to try this experimental feature. When set to view , you will see a new Chat Sessions view is shown in the VS Code Side Bar. This view enables you to manage and interact with your local chat sessions, as well as the coding agent sessions. When set to showChatsMenu , coding agent chat sessions are shown alongside the local chat history. This integration requires the latest GitHub Pull Request extension and a repository open that supports Copilot coding agent. For more information, see the new documentation on how to use coding agent in VS Code . Theme: Sharp Solarized (preview on vscode.dev ) Extension Authoring Terminal activation events Two new activation events are available for extensions: onTerminal : Triggered when any terminal is opened. onTerminalShellIntegration : Triggered when rich shell integration is activated for a terminal. You can specify a shellType to target specific shells. For example, onTerminalShellIntegration:bash activates when shell integration is enabled for a Bash terminal. Proposed APIs Render custom webviews in chat responses The Chat Output Renderer API lets extensions take chat responses beyond text and images. With it, your extension can use a webview to render arbitrary HTML content in the chat output. Example use cases include custom visualizations, inline previews, and even interactive controls. The Chat Output Renderer extension sample shows how this API can be used to render Mermaid diagrams in chat responses. Here's an example of this extension sample in action: The neat thing is not that VS Code can render Mermaid diagrams, but that this rendering can be contributed entirely by extensions. With it, you can iterate on the custom outputs in chat: Here's a quick run down of how the API works: Register a language model tool that can return custom data as part of its response. We use a mime type to identify this data. Register a chat output renderer for this mime type. When a language model calls the tool, invoke the chat output renderer to render it into a webview in the response. Check out the extension sample for a full end-to-end example of this API in action. This API has the potential to be very powerful and enable some amazing new chat experiences, so give it a try and let us know what you think! Chat Session Provider API The new Chat Session Provider API proposal enables extensions to integrate their own chat backend into VS Code's native chat UI. Using it, your extension can open a new chat session, populate the history for that session, and respond to new user prompts. This API is still in early stages and is likely to change. However we're already using it to power the new GitHub coding agent session flow , which loads chats from GitHub and allows you to chat with an agent that is controlled entirely by GitHub. Task execution terminal Extension authors can now access the terminal associated with a running task via the new taskExecution.terminal property. This makes it easier to identify which terminal is linked to a specific task and interact with it programmatically. SecretStorage keys() API If you have ever wanted to get the list of keys that your extension has stored in SecretStorage , you can now do so with the new proposed keys() API: export async function activate ( context : ExtensionContext ) { await context . secrets . store ( 'mySecret' , 'superSecretValue' ); await context . secrets . store ( 'mySecret2' , 'superSecretValue2' ); const keys = await context . secrets . keys (); console . log ( 'All secret keys:' , keys ); // returns ['mySecret', 'mySecret2'] } NOTE : This change is dependent on a change to anything that provides an alternative implementation of a Secret Storage, notably https://vscode.dev , which has adopted the new API, and https://github.dev , which will adopt the new API soon. In an environment where it is not supported, this API will throw an exception. Engineering packages.microsoft.com key update packages.microsoft.com has updated their signing key and as a result, Linux users on newer distributions should stop seeing key-related warnings or errors while installing VS Code. Debian-based distributions automatically receive the new key, whereas users on other distributions may have to manually remove the old key before importing the new key . Electron 37 update In this milestone, we are promoting the Electron 37 update to users on our Stable release. This update comes with Chromium 138.0.7204.100 and Node.js 22.17.0. We want to thank everyone who self-hosted on Insiders builds and provided early feedback. Notable fixes vscode#252384 - Agent Mode pauses when VS Code loses focus Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @RedCMD (RedCMD) @albertosantini (Alberto Santini) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) Pull Requests Contributions to vscode : @adityavc (Aditya Chittari) : #134898 - trimming whitespace when deleting new line character PR #210870 @adrianstephens : Add debug/watch/context to list of valid menu extension points PR #237751 @andy0130tw (Andy Pan) : Support the locale argument of TypeScript language server on the web version (#_256252) PR #256256 @Benimautner : Add inertial scrolling to scrollable elements PR #244034 @BlackHole1 (Kevin Cui) : fix: cannot display MAKR Underlined in minimap PR #226116 @bytemain (Jiacheng) : refactor(terminal): introduce ITerminalLaunchResult interface PR #256284 @c-claeys (Cristopher Claeys) : Make ServicesAccessor typing more consistent in editor commands PR #218369 @CookieeQuinn (Quinn) : Fix issue #212484: caretRangeFromPoint was not working when invoked over text which used user-select: none. PR #219819 @CrazySteve0605 (Wang Chong) : fix(gettingStarted): remove duplicated "can be" in hover description PR #254412 @dbreen (Dan Breen) : Use a saner default scrollbar width for the Explorer PR #199784 @devlinjunker : Expose undo/redo and canUndo/canRedo methods on model API PR #213954 @dibarbet (David Barbet) : Enable angle bracket colorization for C# PR #247665 @duncpro (Duncan) : Vertical pipe characters should terminate URLs PR #232460 @dylanchu : TerminalTaskSystem: Fix addtion arguments for string command PR #251201 @estrizhok (Eugene Strizhok) : Correct capitalization of 'JetBrains' and 'ReSharper' in settings UI PR #254472 @firelizzard18 (Ethan Reesor) : Context key availableEditorIds for diff editors PR #250198 @futurist (James Yang) : fix(terminal): getBufferReverseIterator bug after scrollback limit reached PR #257311 @g0t4 (Wes Higbee) : Add editor option to allow selection highlighting of multiline selections and another option to control max length PR #228982 @gabrielcsapo (Gabriel Csapo) : feat: adds (requestTime) logLevel to match tsserver options PR #250778 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) Add SecretStorage.keys() as proposed API PR #252804 Fix an @param typo PR #257219 @hickford (M Hickford) : Add editor action 'reverse lines' PR #242926 @HolgerJeromin (Holger Jeromin) : vscode api: Raise compatibility to webview content PR #253635 @iann0036 (Ian Mckay) : fix: Typo in lm invokeTool description PR #257975 @jiahaoxiang2000 (isomo) : Fix git.diff.stageHunk command to work with keyboard shortcuts PR #254145 @Jiogo18 (Jérôme Lécuyer) : Git - l10n discard changes dialogs PR #254366 @joelverhagen (Joel Verhagen) [WIP] Add support for NuGet as an MCP package source (VS Code) PR #254678 Add experiment flag around NuGet MCP assisted config PR #257463 @Jose-AE : Fix Jittery editor mouse wheel zoom when setting window.zoomLevel = 1 PR #227916 @joyceerhl (Joyce Er) : fix: make chat input placeholder less cryptic PR #255601 @justin39 (Justin Wang) Add commit_id option to ServeWebArgs for specific client version PR #255494 Fix --commit-id flag for code serve-web PR #258904 @jwangxx (James Wang) : Add the ability to clear a ChatResponseStream, passing in a reason which results in a warning being displayed PR #257271 @Kaidesuyoo (Kaidesuyo) : fix: Incorrect webWorkerExtensionHost startup process on vscode desktop PR #234505 @madskristensen (Mads Kristensen) : Updated references to schemastore.org PR #254690 @martijnwalraven (Martijn Walraven) : Fix notebook inline values when using language provider PR #254264 @mortalYoung (野迂迂) : feat: editor.minimap.autohide support scroll PR #253868 @neorth (Joakim Berglund) : CamelCase first word if not acronym PR #229797 @Ninglo (Ninglo) : Fix editor.wordSegmenterLocales configuration don't take effect in simpleWidget editors (like chat or SCM input Editor) PR #223921 @OfekShilon (Ofek) : Fix #4775: Escape user code before incorporating in a regex PR #236809 @omar-cs (Omar Carrizales) : Issue #168531: Cursor Height PR #211473 @Q1CHENL (Qichen Liu 刘启辰) : Fix: prevent view shift when enable minimap with right-click on the scrollbar PR #210510 @qirong77 : Fix the unexpected console error that occurs when updating the shadow dom selection in monaco-editor PR #215780 @raffaeu (Raffaele Garofalo) : Feature/move editor menu PR #247818 @RedCMD (RedCMD) : Fix empty end bracket error PR #240609 @remcohaszing (Remco Haszing) Add *.tsbuildinfo to .gitignore PR #254225 Add RTL support based on decorations PR #255455 @rfon6ngy (Griffon Langyer) : Allow \n to trigger a softwrap PR #231120 @Rishi-infy47 (Saptarshi Chakraborty) : fix: changed the node js version for devcontainer PR #257400 @sahin52 (Sahin Kasap) : fix: Quick search does not retain search term PR #234368 @Schpoone (Jason Kuo) Use preserveFocus when focusing stack frames PR #251964 Fix popup message when hovering over an instruction breakpoint PR #254925 @SimonSiefke (Simon Siefke) fix: memory leak in extension features tab PR #256887 fix: memory leak in editor edit context PR #256957 fix: set edit context to undefined in dispose PR #256965 fix: memory leak in ChatInputPart PR #257082 fix: memory leak in context key PR #258206 @Skn0tt (Simon Knott) : Fix testFailure stringify PR #258463 @timheuer (Tim Heuer) : Adds support for proper localhost loopback on RFC 6761 PR #256617 @tmm1 (Aman Karmani) [engineering] add testSplit option to unit-test runner PR #253049 [dev] shortcut to open devtools attached to exthost PR #253139 [engineering] ensure typescript integration tests emit junit reports PR #253528 [engineering] add label to packageTask PR #253779 [engineering] parallelize unzip in product-build-darwin-universal.yml PR #257775 @ttttotem (ttttotem) : Horizontal dragging auto-scroll PR #235174 @turansky (Victor Turansky) : fix: EvaluatableExpression properties jsdoc PR #257930 @yamachu (Yusuke Yamada) Fix invalid settings keys PR #254609 Revert "refactor: remove redundant actionRunner override in ChatEditorOverlayWidget" PR #255456 @yutotnh (yutotnh) : Fix the editor.wordSegmenterLocales description in the settings PR #210305 Contributions to vscode-codicons : @desean1625 (Sean Sullivan) : Add link in readme to where you can easily preview and search for icons. PR #295 Contributions to vscode-copilot-chat : @24anisha Add microsoft internal telemetry PR #341 Internal telemetry fixes -- conversation id and message id PR #369 @danilofalcao (Danilo Falcão) : list all openrouter models without category but tools support PR #208 @devm33 (Devraj Mehta) : Remove unused fields from Completion response interface PR #123 @johnmog (John Mogensen) : Git LFS instructions to CONTRIBUTING.md PR #156 @jwangxx (James Wang) : When rendering the prompts, exclude turns from the history that errored due to prompt filtration PR #399 @shsuman (Shantnu Suman) : Print Error literal at the start of all error messages for better parsing from the logs PR #260 @srilovesflutter (Sri) : corrected typo PR #129 @trycatchkamal (Kamal Raj Sekar) : Removed unused code from tests PR #207 @vritant24 (Vritant Bhardwaj) Add ability to specify models through config for simulation tests PR #324 Add azure open ai support to simulator model config PR #346 Contributions to vscode-eslint : @noritaka1166 (Noritaka Kobayashi) : chore: fix typo in comment-out PR #2031 Contributions to vscode-js-debug : @pilaoda (pilaoda) fix watch panel custom string representation. #2252 PR #2253 fix toString not work in Local Variables panel until all variables defined in scope #2254 PR #2255 Contributions to vscode-json-languageservice : @fengzilong (MO) : feat: allow format range to be undefined PR #272 Contributions to vscode-vsce : @Adjective-Object (Max) : add commonjs annotation to package.json PR #1179 Contributions to debug-adapter-protocol : @osiewicz (Piotr Osiewicz) : chore: Add Zed to the list of tools supporting DAP PR #548 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @Leonidas-from-XIV (Marek Kubica) : ocaml-language-server does not exist anymore PR #2165 @osiewicz (Piotr Osiewicz) : chore: Add Zed to the list of implementors PR #2164 Contributions to python-environment-tools : @renan-r-santos (Renan Santos) : Exclude Pixi environments from the Conda locator PR #234 On this page there are 14 sections On this page Chat MCP Accessibility Editor Experience Notebooks Source Control Terminal Languages Contributions to extensions Extension Authoring Proposed APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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Download not starting? Try this direct download link. Want a head start? Watch this 5min overview. Continue with Customize VS Code or browse all intro videos . Visual Studio Code documentation Get familiar with Visual Studio Code and learn how to code faster with AI. Getting started Download Visual Studio Code Download VS Code for Windows, macOS, or Linux. Set up Visual Studio Code Follow the setup guide to install and configure VS Code for your OS. Getting started Discover the key features of VS Code with the step-by-step tutorial. Code faster with AI Get started with GitHub Copilot, your AI coding assistant. Code with rich features Code in any language Write code in your favorite programming language. Version control Built-in support for git and many other source control providers. Debugging Debug your code without leaving your editor. Testing Run automated tests and view test coverage to validate your code. 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https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_95 | October 2024 (version 1.95) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 October 2024 (version 1.95) Security update : The following extensions have security updates: ms-python.python and ms-vscode-remote.remote-ssh . Update 1.95.1 : The update addresses these issues . Update 1.95.2 : The update addresses these issues . Update 1.95.3 : The update addresses these issues . Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the October 2024 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Copilot Edits - Iterate quickly on large changes across multiple files Copilot Chat in Secondary Side Bar - Keep Copilot Chat open and ready to-go while you work Multiple GitHub accounts - Log in to multiple GitHub accounts in VS Code simultaneously Copilot code reviews - Get a quick review pass or a deeper review of uncommitted changes Docstrings with Pylance - Generate docstring templates for classes or methods Preview settings indicator - View experimental and preview settings in the Settings editor Copilot extensibility - Showcasing Copilot extensibility in VS Code If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. GitHub Copilot Copilot features might go through different early access stages, which are typically enabled and configured through settings. Experimental - view the experimental features ( @tag:experimental ) This setting controls a new feature that is actively being developed and may be unstable. It is subject to change or removal. Preview - view the preview features ( @tag:preview ) This setting controls a new feature that is still under refinement yet ready to use. Feedback is welcome. Start a code editing session with Copilot Edits Copilot Edits is currently in preview Setting : github.copilot.chat.edits.enabled With Copilot Edits, you can start an AI-powered code editing session where you can quickly iterate on code changes. Based on your prompts, Copilot Edits proposes code changes across multiple files in your workspace. These edits are applied directly in the editor, so you can quickly review them in-place, with the full context of the surrounding code. Copilot Edits is great for iterating on large changes across multiple files. It brings the conversational flow of Copilot Chat and fast feedback from Inline Chat together in one experience. Have an ongoing, multi-turn chat conversation on the side, while benefiting from inline code suggestions. Get started with Copilot Edits in just three steps: Start an edit session by selecting Open Copilot Edits from the Chat menu, or press . Add relevant files to the working set to indicate to Copilot which files you want to work on. Enter a prompt to tell Copilot about the edit you want to make! For example, Add a simple navigation bar to all pages or Use vitest instead of jest . Get more details about Copilot Edits in our documentation. Try it out now and provide your feedback through our issues ! Chat in the Secondary Side Bar The new default location for the Chat view is the Secondary Side Bar . By using the Secondary Side Bar, you can have chat open at any time, while you still have other views available to you like the File Explorer or Source Control. This provides you with a more integrated AI experience in VS Code. You can quickly get to chat by using the ⌃⌘I (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Alt+I ) keyboard shortcut. With the introduction of the new Chat menu next to the Command Center, bringing up the Secondary Side Bar with chat is just a click away: The chat menu gives you access to the most common tasks for Copilot Chat. If you wish to hide this menu, a new setting chat.commandCenter.enabled is provided. Note: If you had previously installed GitHub Copilot, a view will show up at the location you had Chat before that enables you to restore the Chat view to the old location, if that works better for you. Copilot code reviews Copilot code reviews are currently in preview With GitHub Copilot code review in Visual Studio Code, you can now get fast, AI-powered feedback on your code as you write it, or request a review of all your changes before you push. GitHub Copilot code review in Visual Studio Code is currently in preview. Try it out and provide feedback through our issues . There are two ways to use Copilot code review in VS Code: Review selection : for a quick review pass, select code in the editor and either select Copilot > Review and Comment from the editor context menu, or use the GitHub Copilot: Review and Comment command from the Command Palette. (This feature is in preview.) Review changes : for a deeper review of all uncommitted changes, select the Copilot Code Review button in the Source Control view, which you can also do in your pull request on GitHub.com. (Join the waitlist , open to all Copilot subscribers) Copilot's feedback shows up as comments in the editor, attached to lines of your code. Where possible, the comments include actionable code suggestions, which you can apply in one action. To learn more about Copilot code review, head to the GitHub code review documentation . Copilot's quick review on code selection can provide feedback that match the specific practices of your team or project, provided you give the right context. When reviewing selections with custom review instructions, you can define those specific requirements via the github.copilot.chat.reviewSelection.instructions setting. Similar to code-generation and test-generation instructions , you can either define the instructions directly in the setting, or you can store them in a separate file and reference it in the setting. The following code snippet shows an example of review instructions: "github.copilot.chat.reviewSelection.instructions" : [ { "text" : "Logging should be done with the Log4j ." }, { "text" : "Always use the Polly library for fault-handling." }, { "file" : "code-style.md" // import instructions from file `code-style.md` } ], An example of the contents of the code-style.md file: Private fields should start with an underscore. A file can only contain one class declaration. Automatic chat participant detection Setting : chat.experimental.detectParticipant.enabled GitHub Copilot has several built-in chat participants, such as @workspace , and you may have installed other extensions that contribute chat participants too. To make it easier to use chat participants with natural language, Copilot Chat will automatically route your question to a suitable participant or chat command, when possible. If the automatically selected participant is not appropriate for your question, you can still select the rerun without link at the top of the chat response to resend your question to Copilot. This month, we also added an action to let you skip this detection behavior on a per-request basis. The default action when you enter a chat prompt is Send and dispatch , which includes participant detection. If you choose Send , the request is sent directly to Copilot Chat and it won't be automatically dispatched to a chat participant. You can also disable automatic participant detection entirely with the chat.experimental.detectParticipant.enabled setting. Control current editor context Copilot Chat has always automatically included your current selection or the currently visible code as context with your chat request. Large Language Models (LLMs) are generally good at understanding whether a piece of context is relevant. But sometimes, when you ask a question that is not about your current editor, including this context might affect how the model interprets your question. We now show a special attachment control in the chat input that gives a hint about the editor context and which enables you to toggle whether or not to include the editor context. There are no changes to the behavior of the editor context. When the active editor has a selection, then just the selection is included. Otherwise, just the code that is scrolled into view is included. You can still attach other files or the full file by using the paperclip button or by typing # in the chat prompt. Interactive workspace symbol links A common use case of Copilot Chat is asking questions about the code in your workspace, such as using /tests to generate new unit tests for the selected code or asking @workspace to find some specific class or function in your project. This milestone, we added enhanced links for any workspace symbols that Copilot mentions in chat responses. These symbol links can help you better understand Copilot responses and learn more about the symbols used in them. Symbol links are rendered as little pills in the response, just like the file links we added last milestone. To start learn more about a symbol, just select the symbol link to jump to that symbol's definition: You can also hover over the symbol link to see which file the symbol is defined in: To start exploring a symbol in more detail, just right-click on the symbol link to bring up a context menu with options, such as Go to Implementations and Go to References : Basic symbol links should work for any language that supports Go to Definition. More advanced IntelliSense options, such Go to Implementations, also require support for that language. Make sure to install language extensions to get the best symbol support for any programming languages used in Copilot responses. Fix using Copilot action in the Problem hover When you hover over a problem in the editor, it now includes an action to fix the problem using Copilot. This action is available for problems that have a fix available, and the fix is generated by Copilot. Workspace indexing @workspace lets you ask questions about code in your current project. This is implemented using either GitHub's code search or a smart local index that VS Code constructs. This milestone, we added a few more UI elements that let you understand how this workspace index is being used. First up, the new GitHub Copilot: Build Local Workspace index command lets you explicitly start indexing the current workspace. This indexing is normally kicked off automatically the first time you ask a @workspace question. With the new command, you can instead start indexing at any time. The command also enables indexing of larger workspaces, currently up to 2000 files (not including ignored files, such as the node_modules or out directories). While the index is being built, we now also show a progress item in the status bar: Indexing workspaces with many hundreds of files can take a little time. If you try to ask an @workspace question while indexing is being constructed, instead of waiting, Copilot will try to respond quickly by using a simpler local index that can be built up more quickly. We now show a warning in the response when this happens: Notice that Copilot was still able to answer the question in this case, even though it used the simpler local index instead of the more advanced one. That's often the case, although more ambiguous or complex questions might only be answerable once the smarter index has been constructed. Also keep in mind that if your workspace is backed by a GitHub repository, we can instead use GitHub's code search to answer questions. That means that code search is used instead of the simpler local index. Chat follow-up improvements Setting : github.copilot.chat.followUps To make more room for chat conversations in the Chat view, we've made follow-up prompts more concise and, by default, they only appear on the first turn. Configure the github.copilot.chat.followUps setting to change when follow-up prompts appear: firstOnly (default) - Follow-up prompts only appear on the first turn always - Follow-up prompts always appear never - Disable follow-up prompts Sort by relevance in Semantic Search (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.search.semanticTextResults Last milestone, we introduced the ability to perform a semantic search using Copilot to get search results that are semantically relevant to your query. We have now improved the search results by sorting them by their relevance. Keyword matches from more relevant snippets are deemed more relevant overall. Workbench Multiple GitHub accounts Graduating last month's feature to the default behavior, it's now possible to be logged in to multiple GitHub accounts in VS Code at the same time. Here are a couple of scenarios in which you might need multiple accounts: Use Account1 for Settings Sync and Account2 for the GitHub Pull Request extension Use Account1 for the GitHub extension (to push) and Account2 for GitHub Copilot To use this functionality, simply trigger a log in action (either with a built-in feature like Settings Sync or with an extension), and you'll be given the option to log in to a different account. This feature also pairs nicely with the Account Preference Quick Pick , should you need to change the selected account at a later stage. While most things should just continue to work with your existing extensions, some behaviors might not play perfectly nice with this multi-account world just yet. If you think there's room for improvement, do open an issue on those extensions. With the help of the relatively new vscode.authentication.getAccounts('github') API, extensions have a lot of power to handle multiple accounts. Add additional accounts when changing account preferences Last month, we introduced the Account Preference Quick Pick , which is useful for changing the preferred account to use for an extension should you need to change that for any reason. One of the pieces of feedback we received was around wanting an easy way to add an account that is not yet logged in. This milestone, we have introduced a new item in the Quick Pick that enables you to do just that. Use the Use a new account... item to start an authentication flow and set the account preference to that account in one go. Settings editor indicator for Experimental and Preview settings Previously, it wasn't always clear which settings were experimental or preview from looking at the Settings editor. To highlight experimental and upcoming features, the Settings editor now displays indicators next to experimental and preview settings. You can type @tag:experimental or @tag:preview in the Settings editor search box to filter to settings accordingly. Extension authors can add "experimental" or "preview" tags to their settings to show the corresponding indicator in the Settings editor. Theme: Light Pink (preview on vscode.dev ) More icons for profiles In this milestone, we have added more icons for profiles. You can now choose from a wider range of icons to customize your profile. View icons in Panel In the workbench Panel area, views are typically displayed as labels in the title bar (for example, TERMINAL or OUTPUT ). However, on smaller screens, these labels can exceed the available space, causing some views to overflow into a dropdown menu. To address this, we've added a new setting: workbench.panel.showLabels . When disabled, views are displayed as icons instead of labels, conserving horizontal space and reducing overflow. workbench.panel.showLabels: true workbench.panel.showLabels: false Editor Occurrences Highlight Delay This milestone, we have introduced the setting editor.occurrencesHighlightDelay to give you control over the delay before occurrences are highlighted in the editor. Lowering this delay value can lead to an editor experience that feels more responsive when working with semantic highlighting. VS Code for the Web VS Code for the Web supports local file events When using Chrome or Edge as of version 129, opening https://insiders.vscode.dev with a local folder now supports file events. If you make changes to files and folders of the opened workspace outside the browser, these changes are reflected immediately inside the browser. This feature leverages the new FileSystemObserver interface that is proposed as new API for the web. Contributions to extensions Copilot extensions showcase This milestone, the team worked on building several extensions that showcase Copilot extensibility in VS Code . These extensions demonstrate the following capabilities: Chat Participant & Tool APIs prompt-tsx How to leverage the language models provided by GitHub Copilot Try these extensions and see how you can extend Copilot in your own extensions. Extension Links GitHub Pull Requests Marketplace Web Search for Copilot Marketplace , source code MermAId diagram generation with Copilot Marketplace Data Analysis for Copilot Marketplace , source code VS Code Commander Marketplace Vision for Copilot Preview Marketplace GitHub Pull Requests Version 0.100.0 of the GitHub Pull Requests extension adds Copilot integration: Use the @githubpr chat participant in the Chat view to search for issues, summarize issues/prs, and suggest fixes for issues. @githubpr uses a number of Language Model tools to accomplish this. There's also a new Notifications view that shows GitHub notifications, with an action to prioritize them with Copilot. To try everything out, you can set the following settings: githubPullRequests.experimental.chat githubPullRequests.experimental.notificationsView Issue Search with Copilot The new @githubpr Chat participant can search for issues on GitHub. When displaying issues, @githubpr shows a Markdown table and tries to pick the best columns to show, based on the search. Summarizing and Fixing with Copilot Each issue listed in the Issues view now has a new action, Summarize With Copilot , that opens the Chat panel and summarizes the selected issue. We also added another action, Fix With Copilot , that summarizes the selected issue and uses the workspace context to suggest a fix for it. Notification Prioritization with Copilot (Experimental) This milestone, we added an experimental Notifications view that lists your unread notifications across repositories. By default, the notifications are sorted by most recently updated descending, but you can use the Sort by Priority using Copilot action from the view title's ... menu to have Copilot prioritize the notifications. Selecting each notification triggers an action to summarize the notification using Copilot. The view also contains easily accessible actions to mark a notification as read, or to open the notification on GitHub.com. Web Search for Copilot This extension showcases: Chat Participant & Tool APIs prompt-tsx How to leverage the language models provided by GitHub Copilot The source code is available on GitHub here . Description Get the most up-to-date and relevant information from the web right in Copilot. This is powered by one of two different search engines, configured by websearch.preferredEngine : Tavily (default) Bing As a user, you'll need to acquire an API key from one of these services to use this extension. Upon first use, it asks you for that key and stores it using VS Code's built-in secret storage, and can be managed via VS Code's authentication stack as well just as you would for your GitHub account. Chat participant This extension contributes the @websearch chat participant, which is capable of handling questions that likely need live information from the internet. You can invoke it manually using @websearch when did Workspace Trust ship in vscode? Chat tool This extension contributes the #websearch chat language model tool as well, which is similar to the participant but is useful for providing context from the web in other chat participants. For example: @workspace /new #websearch create a new web app written in Python using the most popular framework Additionally, if you are working on your own Chat particpant or tool, you can consume this Chat tool via the vscode.lm.invokeTool API. MermAId diagram generation with Copilot The vscode-mermAId ( vscode:extension/ms-vscode.copilot-mermaid-diagram ) extension contributes a new chat participant to GitHub Copilot to build and modify visualizations for your code with Mermaid, a Markdown-inspired diagraming and charting tool. Create and render diagrams Create any type of Mermaid-supported diagrams through chat conversations and use the /iterate slash command to refine the diagram. Slash commands are available for specific diagrams to provide extra guidance to the model. Links are added for certain diagram types, like flow, to point back to the references that were gathered to build the diagram. Mermaid Visual Outline view Open the Visual Outline view to dynamically generate diagrams from the active editor. You can break out into chat for finer control. Chat tool The extension contributes a tool to gather symbol information within files or the entire workspace and that can be consumed by other chat participants when this extension is installed. Data Analysis for Copilot The Data Analysis for Copilot extension empowers people in the data science field. From cleaning up a .csv file, to performing higher-level data analysis by leveraging different statistics measures, graphs, and predictive models, the @data chat participant helps make more advanced and informed decisions by offering tailored insights and interactivity for data tasks. The extension contributes a tool where the LLM can ask to execute Python code by using Pyodide and get the result of the relevant Python code execution. It is also able to smartly retry for better or more appropriate execution results in case of errors. You can also export the code that is used to perform the analysis (or generate visualizations) into a Jupyter Notebook or a Python file. You can download the extension from the marketplace and the source is available on GitHub here . Data analysis and visualizations Given a CSV file, enter a prompt such as Analyze the file #<file name> or write a more specific prompt (see below recording) Provide follow-up prompts to request the generation of visualizations, such as charts, plots, and more Exporting the code used to perform the data analysis The Python code used to perform the analysis and generate visualizations can be viewed The Code can be exported in a Jupyter notebook or a Python file Editor and explorer integrations for CSV files Right-click on a CSV file to analyze it Open a CSV file and use the Copilot icon to analyze the file VS Code Commander extension The VS Code Commander extension ( vscode:extension/ms-vscode.vscode-commander ) acts as your personal assistant within VS Code. This powerful tool enables you to configure your VS Code environment by using conversational, free-form text. With the VS Code Commander, you can: Discover and explore various settings and commands Tailor your development environment to your needs These actions can be performed through a simple and intuitive chat interface, making it easier than ever to manage your VS Code configuration. Vision for Copilot Preview extension The Vision for Copilot Preview extension ( vscode:extension/ms-vscode.vscode-copilot-vision ) enables you to attach images directly as contextual input, enriching conversations and enabling more dynamic, visually-supported responses. This extension will be eventually deprecated in favor of built-in image flow in Github Copilot Chat. Vision in Chat For now, you can experience the image attachment flow in the Chat view by using your own OpenAI, Azure OpenAI, Anthropic, or Gemini keys. Get started by easily attaching images from the clipboard or dragging them directly into the chat. Theme: Sapphire (preview on vscode.dev ) Vision with Quick Fixes Additionally, you can generate or refine alt text for images in markdown, HTML, JSX, or TSX documents with the provided code actions, simplifying the process of incorporating descriptive text for better context and accessibility. Alt text quick fixes work for images in the workspace and image URLs. This extension uses the ChatReferenceBinaryData proposed API. Feel free to check out an example of how it's used in the source code, available on GitHub here . Python Native REPL Variables view The Native Python REPL now provides up-to-date variables for the built-in Variables view. This lets you dig into the state of the interpreter as you execute code from files or through the REPL input box. Generate docstrings with Pylance You can now more conveniently generate documentation for your Python code with Pylance 's docstrings template generation feature! You can generate a docstring template for classes or methods by typing """ or ''' , pressing Ctrl+Space , or selecting the lightbulb to invoke the Generate Docstring code action. The generated docstring includes fields for the function's description, parameters, parameter types, return and return types. This feature is currently behind an experimental setting, but we look forward to making it the default experience soon. You can try it out today by enabling the python.analysis.supportDocstringTemplate setting. Fold all docstrings Documentation strings are great for providing context and explanations for your code, but sometimes you might want to fold them to focus on the code itself. You can now more easily do so by folding docstrings with the new Pylance: Fold All Docstrings command, which can also be bound to a keybinding of your choice. To unfold them, use the Pylance: Unfold All Docstrings command. Improved import suggestions One of Pylance's powerful features is its ability to provide auto-import suggestions. By default, Pylance offers the import suggestion from where the symbol is defined, but you might want it to import it from a file where the symbol is imported (i.e. aliased). With the new python.analysis.includeAliasesFromUserFiles setting, you can now control whether Pylance includes alias symbols from user files in its auto-import suggestions or in the add import Quick Fix. Note that enabling this setting can negatively impact performance, especially in large codebases, as Pylance may need to index more symbols and monitor more files for changes, which can increase resource usage. Experimental AI Code Action: Implement Abstract Classes You can now get the best of both worlds with AI and static analysis with the new experimental Code Action to implement abstract classes! This feature requires both Pylance and the GitHub Copilot extensions. To try it out, you can select the Implement all inherited abstract classes with Copilot Code Action when defining a class that inherits from an abstract one. You can disable this feature by setting "python.analysis.aiCodeActions": {"implementAbstractClasses": false} in your User settings. Extension Authoring Tools for language models We have finalized our LanguageModelTool API ! This API enables chat extensions to build more powerful experiences by connecting language models to external data sources, or take actions. The API comes with two major parts: The ability for extensions to register a tool . A tool is a piece of functionality that is meant to be used by language models. For example, reading the Git history of a file. When a tool is registered using the lm.registerTool method, it's accessible to other extensions as well, in the lm.tools list. This will enable chat extensions to seamlessly integrate with other extensions via an ecosystem of shared tools. The mechanics for language models to support tools, such as extensions passing tools when making a request, language models requesting a tool invocation, and extensions communicating back the result of a tool invocation. The use of language model tools is complex, and this API does not hide that complexity. If you want to register a tool or make use of tools in your chat participant, we recommend starting with the extension sample . Chat participant detection We have finalized our API for chat participant detection, which allows GitHub Copilot to automatically select your chat participant or participant command to handle a user's question. Please check out our documentation for a detailed tutorial and recommendations. VS Code Speech The VS Code Speech extension is updated to the August version of the Azure Speech SDK and comes with newer models for speech-to-text recognition. You should see improved results with this update for the speech-to-text integrations in VS Code , such as Copilot Chat. Comment Thread collapsibleState The expand/collapse state of a CommentThread can be changed using the new CommentThread.collapsibleState property, even once the thread has already been shown. Previously, this property would only be respected the first time the comment thread was shown. Codicons in welcome views Welcome views now support the ability to render codicons. You can do so using the usual $(icon-name) in your welcome view. Chat participant access to model picker You may have noticed the model picker in the Chat view, which lets you select the model that is used for a chat request. Your chat participant extension needs to adopt a new API in order to use this model picker. We just finalized a new model property on the ChatRequest object, which will be set to the LanguageModelChat instance for the model in the picker. You can use this instead of the lm.selectChatModels method. If your extension wants to use a particular model besides the selected one, you can still use lm.selectChatModels instead. Preview Features TypeScript 5.7 We've continued improving our support for the upcoming TypeScript 5.7 release. Check out the TypeScript 5.7 beta blog post and the TypeScript 5.7 plan for details. To start using preview builds of TypeScript 5.7, install the TypeScript Nightly extension . Update imports on paste for JavaScript and TypeScript Tired of having to add imports after moving code between files? Try out our experimental support for updating imports on paste! When you copy and paste code between editors, VS Code automatically adds imports when the code is pasted: Notice how it not only added imports, it even added a new export for a local variable that was used in the pasted code! To try this out today, make sure you are using TypeScript 5.7+. Then enable javascript.experimental.updateImportsOnPaste / typescript.experimental.updateImportsOnPaste . Currently this is only supported when pasting between text editors in the same VS Code window. Proposed APIs Chat Reference Binary Data for image attachments We now allow images ( png , jpeg , bmp , gif , and tiff ) to be pasted in chat if there is an extension that uses the ChatReferencebinaryData proposed API. export class ChatReferenceBinaryData { /** * The MIME type of the binary data. */ readonly mimeType : string ; /** * Retrieves the binary data of the reference. * @returns A promise that resolves to the binary data as a Uint8Array. */ data (): Thenable < Uint8Array >; /** * @param mimeType The MIME type of the binary data. * @param data The binary data of the reference. */ constructor ( mimeType : string , data : () => Thenable < Uint8Array >); } Extension authors can access this after creating a chat handler via request.references , which can be a URI when images are attached via drag and drop or from the quick pick, or will be ChatReferenceBinaryData for pasted images. Engineering Prompt building library for LLMs This month, we open sourced our @vscode/prompt-tsx library, which we've developed and used in Copilot Chat over the past year for crafting language model prompts. The library enables developers to create their prompts using TSX/JSX syntax, similar to React, and includes a variety of tools to make the best use of prompts' token budget. AMD code removal and more ESM use in web We removed the last traces of AMD (Asynchronous Module Definition) from our sources, mainly from the build scripts that we still kept for supporting AMD in case needed for a recovery release. In addition, https://vscode.dev is now also running 100% with ESM (ECMAScript Modules) only. Migration to ESLint 9 We've updated both the main VS Code repo and all of our extension samples to use ESLint 9. This included migrating all of our ESLint configuration to use modern flat configs . Electron 32 update In this milestone, we are promoting the Electron 32 update to users on our stable release. This update comes with Chromium 128.0.6613.186 and Node.js 20.18.0. We want to thank everyone who self-hosted on Insiders builds and provided early feedback. Notable fixes 177046 will crash after searching at extension panel Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @RedCMD (RedCMD) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @Abrifq (Arda Aydın) : Change window.experimentalControlOverlay 's scope to application PR #230593 @asemdreibati (Asem Dreibati) : handle edge case in slice function in Iterable namespace (#_230683) PR #232134 @BABA983 (BABA) Add developer action to show gpu status PR #222291 Fix debug console is cleared on style changed PR #224694 Support open in editor in git editor PR #226967 @Bistard (SIHAN LI) : Fix typo: context view anchor option might be dismissed when using || PR #228896 @cobey (Cody Beyer) : added mistral ai npm package PR #229865 @elias-pap (Elias Papavasileiou) : fix: improve settings descriptions for actions triggered on save PR #230052 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) : Correct Menu Contexts info on extension's Commands page (fix #229258) PR #229260 @hamirmahal (Hamir Mahal) : style: simplify string formatting for readability PR #231763 @injust (Justin Su) : Fix "in none full screen mode" typo PR #229914 @jamesharris-garmin (James Harris) : Fix missing __dirname in --locate-shell-integration-path PR #231423 @jeanp413 (Jean Pierre) : Fix if logOutputChannel is created again after being disposed, it will disappear PR #225709 @Kaidesuyoo (Kaidesuyo) : Performance optimization PR #230804 @kkshinkai (Kk Shinkai) : Correctly trigger the onDidAddListener event in emitter options PR #230259 @Parasaran-Python (Parasaran) : 228640: Hiding prelaunch task popup if the setting to hide it is enabled PR #231225 @quiple (Minseo Lee) : Change Korean font priority PR #230195 @r3m0t (Tomer Chachamu) : Fix scrolling of Test Results when a new test starts (fixes #229531) PR #229532 @sandersn (Nathan Shively-Sanders) : TS extension: register call to CopilotRelated with copilot extension PR #228610 @ShadowRZ (夜坂雅) : fix: Use a proper desktop name in package.json PR #231472 @trevor-scheer (Trevor Scheer) : Marker message white-space nowrap -> pre PR #229454 @vietanhtwdk : rerender on resize stickyscroll PR #227400 @yanglb (Yanblb) : add type checking to decorators PR #230626 Contributions to vscode-docs : @Cecil0o0 (hj) doesn't provide built-in language support in the core editor PR #7679 location is restricted in a limited area for debug toolbar as floating PR #7704 Outdated command title PR #7705 @echofly : Update v1_94.md PR #7677 @ghosted-sound Update aksextensions.md PR #7693 Update package-management.md PR #7694 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) Document the hide property PR #7643 Fix typo PR #7687 @oleschri : add argument --update-extensions PR #7681 @partev : fix URL redirect PR #7640 @ptrptrd : docs: remove double entries in theme color references PR #7639 @RonakRahane : Added documentation for new Code Coverage in C# Fixes #7635 PR #7664 Contributions to vscode-js-debug : @marcusball (Marcus Ball) : feat: use remoteHostHeader option when looking up websocket address PR #2111 Contributions to vscode-languageserver-node : @DanTup (Danny Tuppeny) : Add support for CompletionList "applyKind" to control how defaults and per-item commitCharacters/data are combined PR #1558 Contributions to vscode-mypy : @jwhitaker-gridcog (Jarrad) : run mypy in the directory of the nearest pyproject.toml or mypy.ini PR #316 Contributions to vscode-vsce : @andrewlayer : Added unpublish to api.ts PR #1061 @deribaucourt (Enguerrand de Ribaucourt) : Fix regression with workdir symlinks PR #1053 @dtivel (Damon Tivel) : Quote filename value in Content-Disposition header PR #1060 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @asukaminato0721 (Asuka Minato) add systemd PR #2034 add 3 lsp PR #2046 @DanTup (Danny Tuppeny) : Add support for completionList.applyKind to determine how values from completionList.itemDefaults and completion are combined. PR #2018 @DavyLandman (Davy Landman) : Added Rascal to relevant LSP implementor sections PR #2029 @g-plane (Pig Fang) : fix punctuation typo PR #2048 @nthykier (Niels Thykier) : Add the debputy language server PR #2044 @RainCmd (渴望蓝天) : Add Rain language server to LSP PR #2039 @WilsonZiweiWang (ziweiwang) : Add BitBake language server PR #2049 @yasmewad (Yash Mewada) : Add Smithy language server links to LSP PR #2036 Contributions to lsprotocol : @nobodywasishere (Margret Riegert) : Add Crystal plugin to README PR #403 Contributions to tolerant-php-parser : @TysonAndre (Tyson Andre) : Fix php 8.4 notices about implicitly nullable parameters PR #410 On this page there are 11 sections On this page GitHub Copilot Workbench Editor VS Code for the Web Contributions to extensions Extension Authoring Preview Features Proposed APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_80 | June 2023 (version 1.80) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. 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Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the June 2023 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Accessibility improvements - Accessible View for better screen reader support, Copilot audio cues. Better editor group and tab resizing - Set min tab size, avoid unnecessary editor group resizing. Skip subwords when expanding selection - Control whether to use camel case for selection. Terminal image support - Display images directly in the integrated terminal. Python extensions for mypy and debugpy - For Python type checking and debugging in VS Code. Remote connections to WSL - Connect to WSL instances on remote machines using Tunnels. Preview: GitHub Copilot create workspace/notebook - Quickly scaffold projects and notebooks. New C# in VS Code documentation - Learn about C# development with the C# Dev Kit extension. If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Accessibility Accessible View A new command Open Accessible View ( ⌥F2 (Windows Alt+F2 , Linux Shift+Alt+F2 ) ) allows screen reader users to inspect content character by character, line by line. Invoke this when a hover or chat panel response is focused. Accessibility help improvements A new command Open Accessibility Help ( ⌥F1 (Windows Alt+F1 , Linux Shift+Alt+F1 ) ) opens a help menu based on the current context. It currently applies to the editor, terminal, notebook, chat panel, and inline chat features. Disable the accessibility help menu hint and open additional documentation, if any, from within the help menu. Accessibility help for notebooks A new accessibility help menu was added for notebooks to provide information about the editor layout and navigating and interacting with the notebook. Chat audio cues There are now audio cues for the GitHub Copilot chat experience and can be enabled via audioCues.chatRequestSent , audioCues.chatResponsePending , and audioCues.chatResponseReceived . Chat accessibility improvements Chat responses are provided to screen readers as soon as they come in and the inline and chat panel accessibility help menus contain more detailed information about what to expect and how to interact with each feature. Settings editor alt text improvements The Settings editor (accessible through the Preferences: Open Settings (UI) command) is now less verbose when navigating with a screen reader. In particular, the Settings scope switcher announces the actual name of the scope rather than a file path, and the settings description alt text has been cleaned up to not include raw Markdown formatting. Workbench Auto playing and looping for previewed videos You can now enable video autoplaying and looping for the built-in video file preview. The relevant settings are: mediaPreview.video.autoPlay — Enable video autoplay. Autoplayed videos are automatically muted. mediaPreview.video.loop — Enable video looping. These settings are off by default. More help when editor is readonly With the introduction of readonly mode in VS Code last milestone, editors can be readonly due to workspace configuration. This milestone, we enhanced the notification message in the editor when you try to type in a readonly editor and in some cases provide a link to change the files.readonly settings. Default file dialog location A new setting files.dialog.defaultPath can configure the default location that file dialogs (for example when opening or saving files or folders) should show when they open. This default is used only as a fallback when no other location is known, for example in empty VS Code windows. Disable maximizing editor groups on tab double click A new setting workbench.editor.doubleClickTabToToggleEditorGroupSizes disables toggling the size of an editor group from maximized to restored when double-clicking on a tab of that group. Control minimal width of fixed width tabs A new setting workbench.editor.tabSizingFixedMinWidth controls the minimum size of a tab when workbench.editor.tabSizing is set to fixed . Fixed tab widths are explained in more detail in the 1.79 release notes . Editor group split sizing changed to 'auto' A new value for the workbench.editor.splitSizing setting called auto is the new default. In this mode, splitting an editor group distributes the available size evenly to all editor groups only if none of the editor groups has been resized. Otherwise, the space of the split editor group is divided in half and placed in the new editor group. The intent of this change is to not break layouts that you have created when you split, but still preserve the previous default behavior of distributing the size evenly otherwise. Search .gitignore exclude behavior When search.useIgnoreFiles is set to true , the workspace's .gitignore is now respected regardless of whether the workspace is initialized as a Git repository or not. Max height for comments The setting comments.maxHeight lets you disable the max height restriction on the comments, such as those displayed for pull requests when using the GitHub Pull Requests and Issues extension. Troubleshoot issues in VS Code There is a new command Help: Troubleshoot Issue in the Command Palette to help you troubleshoot an issue in VS Code. The launched workflow helps you identify the cause for an issue using a special Troubleshoot profile and the extension bisect feature of VS Code. Extension bisect will enable and disable your installed extensions in a binary search while you indicate whether the issue reproduces or not. This narrows down the extension causing the issue and helps you provide the right information when reporting an issue. Disable Chromium sandbox If you have scenarios where launching VS Code desktop as an elevated user is unavoidable, for example you are launching VS Code with sudo on Linux or as administrator in an AppLocker environment on Windows, then you need to launch VS Code with the --no-sandbox --disable-gpu-sandbox command line options to have the application work as expected. Based on the feedback in issue #184687 , there are now two new settings to make it easier when you need to disable the Chromium sandbox: A new command line option --disable-chromium-sandbox to disable the Chromium sandbox for all processes in the application. This new option can be used as a replacement for --no-sandbox --disable-gpu-sandbox . This option applies to any new process sandboxes that might be added by the runtime in future releases. To persist disabling the Chromium sandbox across launches, do the following: Open the Command Palette ( ⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P ) ). Run the Preferences: Configure Runtime Arguments command. This command opens a argv.json file to configure runtime arguments. You might see some default arguments there already. Add "disable-chromium-sandbox": true . Restart VS Code. Note: Do not use this setting unless you are seeing issues! Editor Skip subword when shrinking and expanding selection The Expand and Shrink Selection commands can now be configured to skip subwords. This is done via the editor.smartSelect.selectSubwords setting. By default, subwords are selected but this can now be disabled. true -> Co | deEditor selects [Code]Editor , then [CodeEditor] false -> Co | deEditor selects [CodeEditor] This setting comes in handy when you use expand and shrink selection frequently with multiple cursors and on heterogeneous words. Improved Emmet support for CSS modules in JSX/TSX Emmet supports a new set of abbreviations for JSX/TSX files. By typing ..test in a JSX or TSX file, and expanding the abbreviation, the line <div styleName={styles.test}></div> is added. The attribute name and value prefix can be configured using the emmet.syntaxProfiles setting. By configuring the emmet.syntaxProfiles setting as follows: "emmet.syntaxProfiles" : { "jsx" : { "markup.attributes" : { "class*" : "className" , }, "markup.valuePrefix" : { "class*" : "myStyles" } } } and then expanding the abbreviation ..test in a JSX or TSX file, you get the abbreviation <div className={myStyles.test}></div> instead. Resizable content hover It is now possible to resize the content hover control. You can hover over the control borders and drag the sashes to change the size of the hover. Terminal Image support Images in the terminal, which were previewed last release, are now enabled by default. Images in a terminal typically work by encoding the image pixel data as text, which is written to the terminal via a special escape sequence. The current protocols supported are sixel and the inline images protocol pioneered by iTerm . To test images manually, you can download and cat a .six example file from the libsixel repository : Or use the imgcat python package or imgcat script with a .png, .gif, or .jpg file: This feature can be disabled by setting: "terminal.integrated.enableImages" : false Multi-line and range link formats There is now support for new link formats, including links that need to scan upwards in order to find the file and links that have a range (line to line or character to character). @@ git range links: OCAML's Dune-style range links: ESLint-style multiple line links: Ripgrep-style multiple line links: Deprecated shell and shellArgs settings removed The settings terminal.integrated.shell.* and terminal.integrated.shellArgs.* were replaced by terminal profiles over a year ago and have just been removed. If you're still using the old shell and shellArgs settings, here is an example before/after to help with migrating: // Before { "terminal.integrated.shell.windows" : "pwsh.exe" , "terminal.integrated.shellArgs.windows" : [ "-Login" ], "terminal.integrated.shell.osx" : "bash" , "terminal.integrated.shellArgs.osx" : [ "-l" ], } // After { "terminal.integrated.profiles.windows" : { "PowerShell Login" : { // Source is a special property that will use VS Code's logic to detect // the PowerShell or Git Bash executable. "source" : "PowerShell" , "args" : [ "-Login" ], "icon" : "terminal-powershell" }, }, "terminal.integrated.profiles.osx" : { // This will override the builtin bash profile "bash" : { "path" : "bash" , "args" : [ "-l" ], "icon" : "terminal-bash" } } } Testing Terminal output support Previously, test output shown in the Test Results view would always be shown in an embedded text editor. This stripped it of rich styling such as colors, styles, and symbols it may have had when run in a terminal. In this release, we show output in a real xterm.js terminal. Theme: Codesong (preview on vscode.dev ) Now that the Test Results view is fully featured, the commands to Show Test Output have been redirected to open the Test Results view instead of creating a temporary terminal. Source Control Close repository improvements In the past, users could close a repository either using the Git: Close Repository command or the Close Repository action in the Source Control view but there were certain actions (for example, opening a file from the closed repository) that would reopen the closed repository. This milestone we have made some improvements so the fact that a repository is closed is now persisted per workspace. Users can reopen closed repositories using the Git: Reopen Closed Repositories... command. Notebooks Improved save performance for Remote Development Previously, saving a notebook in VS Code's Remote extension required sending the entire notebook to the extension host, which could be slow for large notebooks or slow network connections with auto save enabled. We have improved performance by only sending the changes to the notebook to the extension host, resulting in faster notebook saving and execution. While this feature is still disabled by default, we are confident that we will be able to enable it soon. To try it out, add "notebook.experimental.remoteSave": true to your settings. For more details, you can follow issue #172345 . Notebook global toolbar rework The notebook editor's global toolbar has been rewritten to adopt the workbench toolbar, allowing users greater customization of the toolbar actions. Users can now right-click and hide actions from the toolbar. Right-clicking on an action within the toolbar presents the option to hide that action, and also to reset the menu and bring back hidden actions. The toolbar continues to work with all three label strategies: always , never , and dynamic . You can change the label strategy via the setting notebook.globalToolbarShowLabel . Theme: Monokai Pro (Filter Ristretto) (preview on vscode.dev ) Interactive Window backup and restore The Python Interactive Window is now fully integrated with the hot exit feature and restores the editor state between VS Code reloads. The interactiveWindow.restore setting no longer has any effect and was removed. If hot exit is disabled, there is a prompt when closing VS Code giving you the option to save the editor state as a .ipynb file. _Theme: Bearded Theme feat. Gold D Raynh (preview on vscode.dev ) Languages Markdown copy image from preview A new context menu for images in the Markdown preview allows you to copy the image from the preview and paste it into the Markdown editor. When copying the image, the preview editor must be focused. Markdown format pasted URLs as Markdown links The new markdown.editor.pasteUrlAsFormattedLink.enabled setting (default false ) lets you insert links into the Markdown editor that are automatically formatted into Markdown links. If you select some text to be replaced with the pasted link, the selected text will automatically become the title of the link. If no text is selected, there will be a default link title. This feature applies to external browser links as well as files within the workspace. You must enable the setting editor.pasteAs.enabled for this new setting to work. Remote Development The Remote Development extensions , allow you to use a Dev Container , remote machine via SSH or Remote Tunnels , or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. You can learn about new extension features and bug fixes in the Remote Development release notes . Remote menu This milestone, we have updated the Remote menu with entries to help you quickly install and get started with remote connections (SSH, Remote Tunnels , GitHub Codespaces , etc.) by installing the necessary extensions. There is also a Connect to... start entry on the Welcome page to help you get started with remote connections from VS Code desktop. We have also updated the Welcome page on vscode.dev with a start entry to connect to a Remote Tunnel. WSL over Tunnels Last iteration, we previewed connecting to WSL over Remote Tunnels . This feature is now stable this iteration. If you run a Remote Tunnel on a Windows machine with WSL installed, you have the option to connect to WSL directly from the Remote Explorer. Theme: Codesong (preview on vscode.dev ) This feature now works on VS Code desktop as well as vscode.dev . If you're already running a tunnel on your Windows device, make sure to update VS Code to the latest version to enable this feature. Contributions to extensions GitHub Copilot We have introduced preview-only slash commands in the Chat view to help you create projects and notebooks and search for text in your workspace. Note : To get access to the Chat view, inline chat, and slash commands (for example /search , /createWorkspace ), you need to install the GitHub Copilot Chat extension. Create workspaces You can ask Copilot to create workspaces for popular project types with the /createWorkspace slash command. Copilot will first generate a directory structure for your request. You can then use the Create Workspace button to create and open the project directory as a new workspace. Create notebooks You can ask Copilot to create Jupyter notebooks based on your requirements with the /createNotebook slash command. Copilot will generate an outline of the notebook based on your requirements. You can then use the Create Notebook command to create the notebook and fill in the code cells based on the suggested outline. Generate search parameters You can ask Copilot to autofill the search parameters in workspace search. To do this, use the /search command followed by a description of what you want to find in text. These preview slash commands can be enabled by configuring github.copilot.advanced setting as follows: "github.copilot.advanced" : { "slashCommands" : { "createWorkspace" : true , "createNotebook" : true , "search" : true } } Copilot YouTube playlist There is a new installment covering Copilot for PowerShell in the VS Code Copilot Series on YouTube. In case you missed the series, you'll also find other language-specific talks and guidance on effective prompting when using Copilot for development. Python Mypy extension There is now a Mypy Type Checker extension that provides type checking support for Python using mypy , available in preview as a pre-release version. This new extension offers errors and warnings on your entire codebase, instead of only the current file. It also uses dmypy for faster type checking. If you have any issues with this new extension or wish to provide feedback, you can file an issue in the Mypy extension GitHub repo . Debugpy extension When support for Python 2.7 and Python 3.6 was removed from the Python extension, we received a lot of feedback from users who were unable to upgrade their codebase to the latest versions of Python and lost the ability to debug their applications with the latest versions of the Python extension. To work towards a solution for this, we have created a separate Python Debugger extension called Debugpy . By keeping the debugger separate from the Python extension, you will eventually be able to use the latest version of the Python extension while using an older version of the debugger (by disabling extensions auto-update ). This extension is available in preview as a pre-release version using the latest version of debugpy. We plan to support older versions of debugpy in the near future. Give it a try and let us know if everything works appropriately. Our plan is to deprecate the built-in debugging functionality in favor of this separate extension. Pylance localization The Pylance extension is now localized! This means settings, commands, and other text from the extension are translated to your preferred language if you have a Language Pack installed and set to active in VS Code. Test discovery and run rewrite This month we are continuing the rollout of our testing rewrite as an experiment. As a reminder, this rewrite redesigns the architecture behind test discovery and execution for both unittest and pytest in the extension. The rewrite is currently active for 100% of VS Code Insiders users and will begin ramping into stable this month. The rewrite will be adopted shortly, but for now the setting to opt in and out, pythonTestAdapter , still exists. Dynamic run results for pytest and unittest Rolling out with the new experiment is dynamic run results for pytest and unittest. Previously, our test results were only returned once all tests finished running, but now with this feature, test results are delivered individually allowing you to see your tests pass and fail in real time. Index persistence for 3rd-party libraries Pylance performs indexing of third-party libraries that are installed in your environment to enable IntelliSense features such as auto-completion, auto-import, code navigation, etc. Previously, Pylance would index these libraries every time you opened a workspace in VS Code. Now, Pylance persists the index for these libraries, reducing the need for repetitive indexing processes. Deprecation of Python 3.7 support Python 3.7 reached end-of-life (EOL) on 2023-06-27 . As such, official support for Python 3.7 from the Python extension will stop in three months in the 2023.18 release of the extension (which corresponds with the September 2023 release of VS Code). There are no plans to actively remove support for Python 3.7, and so we expect the Python extension will continue to work unofficially with Python 3.7 for the foreseeable future. With all other releases of Python now on an annual release cadence, we expect to stop official support for a Python release once it reaches EOL in the first Python extension release of the following calendar year. For example, Python 3.8 is scheduled to reach EOL in October 2024, so the first Python extension release in 2025 will stop official support. GitHub Pull Requests and Issues There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests and Issues extension, which allows you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. Up to 1000 (from the previous 100) comment threads can be loaded in a pull request. The new VS Code API proposal for a read-only message lets you check out a PR directly from an unchecked-out diff. Avatars in trees and comments are circles instead of squares. Review the changelog for the 0.68.0 release of the extension to learn about the other highlights. Preview Features TypeScript 5.2 support This update includes support for the upcoming TypeScript 5.2 release. Check out the TypeScript 5.2 iteration plan for more details about what the TypeScript team is currently working on. Upcoming tooling highlights include: A new Inline constant refactoring. A new Move to file refactoring that lets you move a symbol into an existing file. To start using the TypeScript 5.2 nightly builds, install the TypeScript Nightly extension. New diff editor This iteration we finished rewriting the diff editor. The rewrite allowed us to add a couple of new features, to improve the performance, and to fix several bugs. To try out the new diff editor, add "diffEditor.experimental.useVersion2": true to your settings. The new diff editor is still experimental, but will eventually replace the current diff editor in a future update. All presented features require the new diff editor. Collapse unchanged regions Use diffEditor.experimental.collapseUnchangedRegions to enable hiding unchanged regions in the new diff editor. This feature is useful when reviewing large diffs with a lot of unchanged code. The borders of the hidden-lines blocks can be dragged or clicked to reveal code from the bottom or top. Show insertion/deletion markers Insertion/deletion markers indicate where in a line words were inserted or deleted, which is especially helpful when a line has both insertions and deletions. Use diffEditor.experimental.showEmptyDecorations to enable/disable insertion and deletion markers. Improved decorations Full line deletions/insertions now have a full width background color. This reduces noise significantly. This is an example of how the new diff editor highlights changes: This is how the old diff editor renders decorations (notice how the line 57 on the right does not have a full width background color): Synchronous diff update When typing in the new diff editor, changes are heuristically applied immediately and trigger an asynchronous diff computation after some delay. In the old diff editor, changes were not applied immediately, causing visible flickering when typing. New - the diffs update immediately when typing: Old - there is some visible flickering: Move detection This experimental feature detects moved code blocks within a file. Use diffEditor.experimental.showMoves to turn it on. At the moment, only simple moves are detected, but we plan to improve this feature in the future. Once a moved code block is selected, source and target locations are aligned and a diff between them is shown. Because move detection is still experimental, expect significant changes in future updates. Extension authoring SecretStorage API now uses Electron API over keytar The SecretStorage API has been the recommended way to store secrets like passwords, access tokens, etc. for years now. Under the hood, it has been using keytar , an abstraction layer used to store secrets in the OS keyring. Due to the deprecation and archiving of keytar, we looked for other solutions for the problem, specifically looking to our runtime, Electron, for a solution. This release, we've started the move from keytar to Electron's safeStorage API . This switch should be transparent to you as secrets are retrieved from keytar and restored via Electron's safeStorage API. In the future, we will remove this migration so that we can remove our dependency on keytar altogether. keytar deprecation plan For a while now, VS Code has had a large dependency on keytar , an abstraction layer used to store secrets in the OS keyring. Additionally, we have included a keytar shim in VS Code that extensions depended on before the introduction of the SecretStorage API . keytar itself is officially archived and not being maintained... In an effort to promote good security practices by not depending on an archived piece of software for storing secrets, we are working on a plan to remove this shim from VS Code. We have already directly reached out to extension authors of popular extensions that still use this keytar shim and they are working on moving off of it. We want to communicate this here as well as in our GitHub Discussions for those we didn't contact directly so we minimize the disruption due to this change. We know this isn't the best news as we had a fair amount of work to remove our dependency on keytar as well, but we believe this is the right thing to do to ensure extensions are using secure APIs. If you are using keytar directly in your extension, there are a couple of options for you to consider: (recommended) Use the SecretStorage API that VS Code provides on the ExtensionContext . This API is cross-platform and works on all platforms that VS Code supports. It is also maintained by the VS Code team, will continue to be maintained, and has been a part of the VS Code API for years. (not recommended) You can bundle the keytar module with your extension. Keep in mind that keytar is a native node module, which means that you will need to publish a platform specific extension for each platform you want to support. Timeline : The current plan is to remove this shim from VS Code Insiders in early August , which means that September 2023's stable release will be the first release without the shim. Work for this is being tracked in issue #115215 and if you have any questions, feel free to ask them here in our GitHub Discussions . Improved vscode.fs.writeFile performance for local files When you are using vscode.fs.writeFile API to write data into files (you should!), write operations to files that are local to the extension host will now resolve much faster. Previously the extension host would delegate the write operation to the VS Code client for execution, but now the operation executes directly inside the extension host, saving round trips. Tree checkbox API The TreeItem checkboxState API has been finalized. By default, tree items that have checkboxes will have their checked state managed by VS Code. This behavior can be changed by setting the TreeViewOptions property manageCheckboxStateManually to true . When manageCheckboxStateManually is set, the extension is responsible for managing checking and unchecking of parent and child checkboxes. EnvironmentVariableCollection.description This new API allows specifying a description for EnvironmentVariableCollection , displayed to the user in the terminal tab hover, to explain what exactly the change is doing. // Example of what the Git extension could use context . environmentVariableCollection . description = 'An explanation of what the environment changes do' ; You can see the API in action in the built-in Git extension, which now describes what the change does: Proposed APIs Every milestone comes with new proposed APIs and extension authors can try them out. As always, we want your feedback. Here are the steps to try out a proposed API: Find a proposal that you want to try and add its name to package.json#enabledApiProposals . Use the latest @vscode/dts and run npx @vscode/dts dev . It will download the corresponding d.ts files into your workspace. You can now program against the proposal. You cannot publish an extension that uses a proposed API. There may be breaking changes in the next release and we never want to break existing extensions. Read-only message for file system providers When you registerFileSystemProvider , you can provide a read-only message instead of simply marking a file system as read-only. The message below is displayed in the editor when a user tries to edit a file from that provider. Engineering Name mangling of exported symbols Last year we started mangling the names of private properties and methods to reduce our code size. We now also mangle exported symbol names, which reduces the size of our main workbench JavaScript file a further 8%. Our name mangling build step now saves a total of 3.9 MB of JavaScript across core VS Code and our built-in extensions. This reduction speeds up downloads, reduces VS Code's install size, and speeds up code loading every time you start VS Code. Checksum integrity checks for Node.js, built-in extensions, and Electron As part of our build, we consume binary resources from other locations, such as Node.js for our remote server and built-in extensions from the Marketplace and Electron. This milestone, we ensure the integrity of these binary resources by validating against a SHA256 checksum that is checked into the vscode GitHub repository. New Linux performance machine We take the performance of VS Code very seriously, especially the elapsed time it takes to open a text editor and see a blinking cursor. To monitor that elapsed time, we run daily performance tests on Windows and macOS. This milestone, we added a Linux machine to the test set, reporting the startup times on Ubuntu 22. Event emitter optimizations VS Code uses event emitters extensively throughout our codebase. We've optimized these emitters this iteration, which slightly improved startup time and memory usage. You can read more about this improvement in issue #185789 . Terminal pty host improvements The "Pty Host" process manages all shell processes launched by the terminal and several improvements were made: Performance There is now a direct channel of communication to the pty host process. The most significant change from this is the reduction of input latency of the terminal. Reconnection (reload window) and process revival (restart) performance has been improved by reducing unneeded calls and parallelizing tasks when there are multiple terminals being restored. We now gather performance metrics on terminal startup and reconnection, which can be viewed via the Developer: Startup Performance command. Diagnostics All terminal-related logs have moved out of the Window output channel and into the new Terminal output channel. When trace log level is on the Pty Host output channel, the terminal will log all RPC calls, which will help in diagnosing terminal problems. Documentation New C# topics You can learn about C# development in VS Code with the C# Dev Kit extension through a new set of C# articles . There you'll find topics explaining how to get started , describing the extension's language features ( code navigation , refactoring , debugging ), and aiding the development life cycle such as Project and Package management. Glob patterns reference VS Code has it's own glob pattern implementation , which it uses for features like Search file and folder filtering, letting you customize the File Explorer view, etc. To learn the details, you can review the new Glob Patterns Reference . Notable fixes Loses text when maximizing the integrated terminal #134448 Support fish shell integration automatic injection #139400 Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @starball5 (starball) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @ArturoDent (ArturoDent) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @AlbertHilb : Add macros entry to markdown-math configuration PR #180458 @antonioprudenzano (Antonio Prudenzano) : Feat: #132598 Add notification in case of running a translated build on windows and macOS PR #181191 @cadinsl : Edited user and workspace tab to only display the name for accessibility #184530 PR #184627 @CGNonofr (Loïc Mangeonjean) : Remove side effect from array.some callback PR #184919 @ChaseKnowlden : chore: update minimum installable version in inno setup PR #175818 @cmtm (Chris Morin) : Respect gitignore file even when not in a git repository PR #183368 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) Implement files.dialog.defaultPath setting (fix #115730) PR #182908 Display terminal icon correctly in panel titlebar (fix #183679) PR #183680 Allow downloads from pages viewed in Simple Browser PR #185117 @hermannloose (Hermann Loose) : Fix color definition for Comments panel tree view icons PR #185654 @hsfzxjy : Fix #185858: Add option to enable/disable editor group maximization on double clicking tab title PR #185966 @iifawzi (Fawzi Abdulfattah) : feat: adding optional support for auto playing and looping videos PR #184758 @InigoMoreno (Iñigo Moreno) : Update argv.ts to allow empty category PR #181311 @jacekkopecky (Jacek Kopecký) : Add tabSizingFixedMinWidth setting (#_185766) PR #186058 @jeanp413 (Jean Pierre) Fix remote.autoForwardPortsSource sometimes not respected from machine settings PR #184860 Fix xterm search addon is loaded twice in vscode in browser PR #184922 @jhunt-scottlogic (Joshua Hunt) : Test Explorer filter UI PR #183192 @jjaeggli (Jacob Jaeggli) : Add dialog role to editor find widget PR #172979 @joshaber (Josh Abernathy) : Fix removing tunnels when the tunnel factory throws an error PR #186566 @kevalmiistry (Keval Mistry) : FIX: conflict actions bar overlapping Complete Merge button fixed PR #184603 @max06 (Flo) : Restore ShellIntegration for fish (#_184659) PR #184739 @r3m0t (Tomer Chachamu) : Add vscode-context-menu-visible class in webviews PR #181433 @russelldavis (Russell Davis) : Add option for smartSelect to ignore subwords PR #182571 @tisilent (xie jialong 努力鸭) : update gutterOffsetX range (dirtydiff , fold) PR #184339 @weartist (Hans) adjust to correct link PR #184011 Fix #182013 PR #184677 Fix #185051 PR #185431 Fix #153590 PR #185467 Fix:#185359 PR #185718 @yshaojun fix: cursor not visible at column 1 in mergeEditor(#_183736) PR #184604 fix: inline completion not displaying(#_184108) PR #185215 Contributions to vscode-emmet-helper : @iifawzi (Fawzi Abdulfattah) : fix: mark successive dots as noise and invalidate jinja syntax abbreviations PR #80 Contributions to vscode-livepreview : @toyobayashi (Toyo Li) : fix console line number in external browser PR #503 Contributions to vscode-pull-request-github : @SKPG-Tech (Salvijus K.) : Fix null when no user name available PR #4892 On this page there are 17 sections On this page Accessibility Workbench Editor Terminal Testing Source Control Notebooks Languages Remote Development Contributions to extensions Preview Features Extension authoring Proposed APIs Engineering Documentation Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_91 | June 2024 (version 1.91) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. 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Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the June 2024 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Preview: Incoming/Outgoing changes graph - Visualize incoming and outgoing changes in the Source Control view. Python environments - Enhanced environment discovery with python-environment-tools. Smart Send in native REPL - Smoothly run code chunks in the native REPL. GitHub Copilot extensibility - Chat and Language Model APIs available in VS Code Stable. Preview: Profiles Editor - Manage your profiles in a single place. Custom tab labels - More variable options and support for multiple extensions. TypeScript 5.5 - Syntax checking for regular expressions and other language features. JavaScript Debugger - Inspect shadowed variables while debugging JavaScript. If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Accessibility Accessible View for editor hover To improve accessibility when coding, the Accessible View and accessibility help menu can now present the content of the editor hover information. Depending on the focused part of the hover, they show information about the focused part or the entire hover content. Link underlines To make links easier to distinguish from regular text in the workbench, you can enable the setting accessibility.underlineLinks to underline links. Workbench Search We added a new setting search.ripgrep.maxThreads that enables you to limit the number of threads that the ripgrep search engine uses. This setting applies regardless whether search is used by the core product or via the extension API. Set search.ripgrep.maxThreads to a nonzero value to configure the number of threads. Be cautious because fixing this setting to a specific value might slow down ripgrep. Adjust allowed encodings for guessing With the new setting files.candidateGuessEncodings , you can configure a set of encodings that should be considered when files.autoGuessEncoding is enabled. The order of configuration determines the priority. This functionality enables you to limit the possible encodings that can be detected to a smaller set and to prioritize one encoding over another. Profiles Editor preview In this milestone, we introduced a new Profiles Editor that enables you to manage profiles from a single place. This experience includes creating new profiles, editing and deleting existing profiles, and importing and exporting profiles to share with others. While creating a new profile, you can preview the profile and customize as needed before saving it. The Profiles Editor also enables you to open new windows with a specific profile, or set a profile as the default profile for new windows. The Profiles Editor is available as an experimental feature behind the workbench.experimental.enableNewProfilesUI setting. Once enabled, you can access the Profiles Editor from the Settings gear icon in the bottom left corner of the window. Give it a try and give us feedback on how we can improve this experience further. New Window with Profile menu item In addition to the Profiles Editor, we added actions to the File menu to open a new window with a specific profile. Use the File > New Window with Profile menu to open a new window with a specific profile. Extension install options We added more options to give you more flexibility when installing extensions: Install an extension without syncing it. Install a specific version of an extension. Previously, you first had to install the latest version of the extension before you could select a specific version. These actions are available in the context menu of the extension in the Extensions view: Access file extensions in custom labels When you define custom labels , you have now more flexibility to access individual file extensions by using the ${extname(N)} syntax. Additionally, ${extname(N)} also supports negative indices to capture file extensions in the reverse order. To get the entire file extension, use ${extname} . For example, for the file tests/editor.test.ts : ${filename} => editor ${extname} => test.ts ${extname(0)} => ts ${extname(1)} => test ${extname(-1)} => test ${extname(-2)} => ts Merge custom label patterns from multiple extensions When two extensions contribute a default configuration for the setting workbench.editor.customLabels.patterns in their configurationDefaults , the contributed patterns are merged together. "workbench.editor.customLabels.patterns" : { "**/app/**/page.tsx": "${dirname} - Page", "**/app/**/layout.tsx": "${dirname} - Layout" } "workbench.editor.customLabels.patterns" : { "**/components/**/index.tsx": "${dirname} - Component" } Default Contribution by Extension 1 Default Contribution by Extension 2 "workbench.editor.customLabels.patterns" : { "**/app/**/page.tsx": "${dirname} - Page", "**/app/**/layout.tsx": "${dirname} - Layout", "**/components/**/index.tsx": "${dirname} - Component" } Resulting Custom Label Patterns Unset a theme color If a theme sets a color or border that you don't like, you can now use default to set it back to the original value: "workbench.colorCustomizations" : { "diffEditor.removedTextBorder" : "default" } Change folding placeholder color The folding placeholder (ellipsis) can now be themed with the color editor.foldPlaceholderForeground . Editor Code Actions on Save With the editor.codeActionsOnSave setting, you can configure a set of Code Actions that are automatically applied when you save a file, for example to organize imports. We improved the IntelliSense for configuring this setting by providing a list of available Code Actions based on your workspace files and the active extensions. Note : be aware that that although true and false are still valid configurations at the moment, they will be deprecated in favor of explicit , always , and never . See Code Actions on Save Docs for examples. Quickly turn off read-only file status If you have configured a file as read-only through the files.readonlyInclude setting, you can now quickly toggle off the read-only status of the file from the read-only editor message. Source Control Incoming/Outgoing changes graph preview We have been exploring using an alternative visualization of the incoming and outgoing changes. This milestone includes an experimental feature that uses a graph to visualize the incoming and outgoing changes. The graph contains the current branch, the current branch's upstream branch, and an optional base branch. The root of the graph is the common ancestor of these branches. You can enable this new visualization by using the scm.experimental.showHistoryGraph setting. Try it out and let us know what you think, as we continue to improve and expand the functionality available in this visualization. Notebooks Find in text selection The Notebook Find control now has "Find in Selection" for textual selections and cell selections. This behavior is enabled by default, and can be controlled via the button within the control. Based on the context of your selection, toggling this button scopes your find query to one or more selected cells, or lines within a cell. Copy or open text output from the context menu When working with text output in notebooks, you can now use the context menu of a text output to copy the output value or to open the output in a new editor. This feature makes it easier to review large streaming outputs. Terminal Support for copy and paste escape sequence (OSC 52) The Operating System Command (OSC) 52 escape sequence is now supported. This can be used by anything running in the terminal but the primary use case is clipboard access for tmux . New custom glyphs The terminal now supports custom glyphs for the branch, line number, and lock Powerline symbols. Like the other custom glyphs we support, these symbols work without the need to configure a font when GPU acceleration is enabled. These symbols also scale perfectly with the cell when font size, line height, or letter spacing is adjusted. Debug JavaScript debugger The JavaScript debugger now shows the correct value of shadowed variables when hovering over them and in inline values (enabled via the debug.inlineValues setting), based on the program's scopes. Theme: Codesong (preview on vscode.dev ) Languages TypeScript 5.5 We now include TypeScript 5.5. This major update brings a number of new language features and tooling improvements. Check out the TypeScript 5.5 blog post for details on this release. Syntax checking for regular expressions Thanks to TypeScript 5.5, we now report many syntax errors in JavaScript and TypeScript regular expression literals. This includes errors such as unclosed groups, incorrect back references, or invalid escapes: Check out the TypeScript 5.5 blog post for more details . Contributions to extensions GitHub Copilot Compact Inline Chat Inline chat rendering is now more compact, which makes it easier to read and understand suggestions. We are also experimenting with a more narrative style for the button text that you can enable via inlineChat.experimental.textButtons . Terminal initial hint A new hint is displayed in the terminal to help discover the inline chat. This hint only shows when the Copilot extension is installed and there is a single terminal that has not had any interaction. It's easy to dismiss the message permanently by right-clicking it. The message also dismisses after you use terminal inline chat for the first time. Apply Code Block The Apply In Editor command on a code block in the Chat view uses the language model to determine the best approach for applying the changes to the current editor. Python Python environment discovery using python-environment-tools We are excited to introduce a new tool, python-environment-tools , designed to significantly enhance the speed of detecting global Python installations and Python virtual environments. This tool uses Rust to ensure a rapid and accurate discovery process. We are currently testing this new feature, running it in parallel with the existing support, to evaluate the new discovery performance in the Python extension. So, you will see a new logging channel called Python Locator that shows the discovery times with this new tool. This enhancement is part of our ongoing efforts to optimize the performance and efficiency of Python support in VS Code. Visit the python-environment-tools repo to learn more about this feature, ongoing work, and provide feedback. Smart Send in native REPL The Python extension has now enabled Smart Send in the VS Code native REPL . Previously, when you placed your cursor on a line of Python code and pressed Shift+Enter , the Python extension would send the exact line contents to the native REPL, even if it would fail, for example because it's part of a multi-line command. Now, Shift+Enter sends minimum executable code in a non-nested scenario, or the highest top-level block of code in a nested scenario. This enables users to quickly Shift+Enter throughout their file to run the maximum amount of executable code with the least amount of effort. Support for reStructuredText docstrings Pylance now has support for rendering reStructuredText documentation strings (docstrings) on hover! This feature is in its early stages and is currently behind a flag as we work to ensure it handles various Sphinx, GoogleDoc, and Epytext scenarios effectively. To try it out, you can enable the experimental setting python.analysis.supportRestructuredText . Try out this change, and report any issues or feedback at the Pylance GitHub repository . Note : this setting is experimental and will likely be removed in the future, as we stabilize this new feature and enable it by default. GitHub Pull Requests and Issues There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests extension, which enables you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. New features include: Commit dates show in the Commits subtree for checked out PRs. Numerous bug fixes. Review the changelog for the 0.92.0 release of the extension to learn about the other highlights. ESLint The ESLint extension now supports the flat config file format . The extension still supports eslintrc files and you can use the eslint.useFlatConfig setting to control which configuration file format is used. Consult the ESLint Flat Config rollout plan to understand ESLint's plan for deprecating and removing support for the eslintrc file format. Extension authoring Chat and Language Model API Last month, we finalized the APIs that enable extensions to participate in chat and to access language models, but they were only available in VS Code Insiders. In this release, these APIs are now fully available in VS Code Stable. Check out our announcement blog post to learn more about these APIs and see how some of early adopters are using them. To get started, head over to our extension sample and the Chat extensibility documentation . Handling of default values for object settings When multiple extensions contribute default values for the same object setting, these default values are now combined. This prevents conflicts between the extensions. Finalized DebugSessionOptions.testRun API Extensions that start a debug session from a test run, can now pass that run into the DebugSessionOptions when they call vscode.debug.startDebugging . When passed, lifecycle actions, such as restarting the debug session, create a new test run as well. Debug Adapter Protocol A couple notable changes were made to the Debug Adapter Protocol : Notation for return values by a new Scope.presentationHint = returnValue option. Addition of a source location to evaluate requests. VS Code implements this and passes the location when evaluating hovers and inline values. Proposed APIs Tools and functions for language models We added an API proposal that enables tools or functions calling. The API comes with two major parts: The ability for extensions to register a "tool". A tool is a piece of functionality that is meant to be used by language models. For example, reading the Git history of a file. The mechanics for language models to support tools, such as: extensions passing tools when making a request, language models requesting a tool invocation, and extensions communicating back the result of a tool invocation. The proposal can be found as vscode.proposed.lmTools.d.ts . Note : The API is still under active development and things will change. Also expect VS Code to ship with reasonable default tools. Authentication getSessions is now getAccounts While we support multi-account authentication providers, something that has always been missing is the ability to get all sessions and take action on a specific session. Previously, we had a getSessions API proposal that attempted to solve this, but after experimentation and using inspiration of popular authentication libraries, we are taking a different approach to solve the issue. We moved away from the previous proposed getSessions API to something that separates the concept of "Accounts" and "Sessions". Extension authors looking to consume authentication sessions can run the following code to get the AuthenticationSessionAccountInformation of the accounts that the user is logged into: const accounts = vscode . authentication . getAccounts ( 'microsoft' ); From there, you can use those accounts to mint sessions specifically for those accounts: const session = vscode . authentication . getSession ( 'microsoft' , scopes , { account: accounts [ 0 ] }); Note : For this to work, the authentication provider needs to handle a new parameter, which you can read about in the API proposal below We believe that this is a much clearer way to handle multiple authentication sessions and will be able to handle various scenarios that we couldn't support before. The proposal can be found as vscode.proposed.authGetSessions.d.ts , which uses the previous name for this proposal, not to break existing code that depends on this proposal. Comment thread reveal We have added an API proposal that enables extensions that provide comments to reveal their own comment threads in the editor. This API provides options for whether to preserve focus when revealing the thread, or to focus into the thread's reply box. The proposal is available at vscode.proposed.commentReveal.d.ts . Attributable test coverage We're working on an API that enables attributing test coverage on a per-test basis. This enables users to see which tests ran which code, filtering both the coverage shown in the editor, and that in the Test Coverage view. Check vscode#212196 for more information and updates. Engineering Decouple NLS from AMD loader This milestone, we started to remove the dependency of the core native language support (NLS) in VS Code with the Asynchronous Module Definition (AMD) loader we ship. Our goal in the future is to use ECMAScript Modules (ESM) loading and drop AMD entirely. To make progress into this direction, we remove our AMD loader plugin dependencies. You should not notice any difference in behaviour, and all the translations we used to support are still supported in both web and desktop. Notable fixes Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @shelvesdragon (Shelves The Dragon) @starball5 (starball) @spartanatreyu (Jayden Pearse) @RedCMD (RedCMD) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @bsShoham (Shoham Ben Shitrit) : allow usage of extname(N) template in custom labels PR #213033 @CGNonofr (Loïc Mangeonjean) : Update preference markers on profile change PR #214353 @cobey (Cody Beyer) updated file to include ai and vector db libs for py and js PR #216771 adding auzre ai package tagging for js PR #216857 adding missing azure ai py packages to tagging PR #216861 @dangerman (Anees Ahee) : Use node 20 in dev container PR #215434 @francescov1 (Francesco Virga) : Add recursive toggle PR #212218 @franciscacarneiro (Francisca Carneiro) : Fix #182308: Pressing PageUp in the search panel no longer causes the layout to change. PR #213067 @gabritto (Gabriela Araujo Britto) : [typescript-language-features] Region-based semantic diagnostics for TypeScript PR #208713 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) : Page correctly on multi-provider timeline (fix #213452) PR #213453 @grgar (George Garside) : Fix merged table cells in extension marketplace readme rendering unmerged PR #211666 @hecticme (H. Ngọc Minh) : fix: do not show activity bar's focus border on click PR #217837 @its-meny : fix: Quotes with headings on markdown not rendering properly PR #205227 @jakebailey (Jake Bailey) : Fix tsc -p ./src, remove no-default-lib PR #216760 @jeanp413 (Jean Pierre) : Fix configure tasks in serverless can delete entire tasks file PR #215810 @mohankumarelec : Added http.noProxy setting which is same as NO_PROXY env variable value that is already present currently PR #211958 @mtbaqer (Mohammad Baqer) : make collapsedText theme-able PR #173203 @powersagitar : Add file extensions for C++20 module interface units PR #214800 @r-sargento (Rafael Sargento) : Implement display variable type setting for vscode (#_210258) PR #214315 @rehmsen (Ole) Fix leaking comment thread when CellComment is reused. PR #214589 Fix two bugs in #214589 fixing #213535. PR #218357 @remcohaszing (Remco Haszing) Replace removeChild with remove PR #213465 Fix opening select boxes PR #214348 @SimonSiefke (Simon Siefke) feature: replace electron File.path with electron webUtils PR #213031 When completing color keys in settings, fill in current value PR #213451 feature: make number of ripgrep threads configurable PR #213511 feature: allow unsetting color theme values in settings PR #213512 fix settings editor memory leak PR #216763 fix: possible memory leak in SettingTreeRenderers PR #216768 fix: add disposable to elementDisposables instead of templateDisposables in renderElement function in SettingEnumRenderer PR #216855 @swordensen (Michael Sorensen) : Fixes #182449 : Pressing Shift re-enables webview during Drag and Drop Events PR #209211 @Timmmm (Tim Hutt) : Fix opening links in the terminal with column numbers PR #210898 @tisilent (xiejialong) : Add showIncludesExcludes in IFindInFilesArgs PR #212347 @werat (Andy Hippo) : Fix error message format PR #214900 @xiaoxianBoy (Snoppy) : chore: fix typos PR #216562 @y0sh1ne (y0sh1ne) : Update language-configuration.json(fix #215999) PR #216394 @yutotnh (yutotnh) : Add the ability to specify a list of candidate encodings when guessing encoding (#_36951) PR #208550 Contributions to vscode-css-languageservice : @wkillerud (William Killerud) : feat: add support for Sass pkg: importers PR #384 Contributions to vscode-extension-samples : @AllanJard (Allan Jardine) : Fix #863 - Start language automatically PR #864 Contributions to vscode-html-languageservice : @johnsoncodehk (Johnson Chu) : Lazy evaluation of voidElements PR #187 Contributions to vscode-languageserver-node : @remcohaszing (Remco Haszing) : Use client ID as fallback for diagnostics collection PR #1445 Contributions to vscode-python-tools-extension-template : @caelean (Caelean Barnes) : Reference filepaths consistently in README PR #208 Contributions to node-jsonc-parser : @Vbbab : Allow the visitor to cease callbacks PR #88 On this page there are 15 sections On this page Accessibility Workbench Editor Source Control Notebooks Terminal Debug Languages Contributions to extensions Extension authoring Debug Adapter Protocol Proposed APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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Explore Stack Internal 476,574 questions se-uql#toggleEditor"> Newest Active Bountied Unanswered More Bountied 0 Unanswered Frequent Score Trending Week Month Unanswered (my tags) Filter Filter by No answers No upvoted or accepted answers No Staging Ground Has bounty Days old Sorted by Newest Recent activity Highest score Most frequent Bounty ending soon Trending Most activity Tagged with My watched tags The following tags: Apply filter Cancel -1 votes 1 answer 71 views Why does clicking the button cause a white screen, and how can I fix this? [closed] I'm building a portfolio website with React + TypeScript and Redux. I have a chat assistant component that should only appear after a user clicks an "Start" button (which sets app.ready to ... javascript reactjs Sahan Silva 37 asked 6 hours ago -4 votes 0 answers 36 views External library (react-tostify) with mixed-case HTML Element Props causing DOM prop name case error in project I'm migrating a React project to Next.js 16. It's using the dependency react-toastify. There are some HTML elements generated that receive custom Toastify attributes, such as: <div ... closetoast=..... reactjs next.js react-toastify gene b. 12.7k asked 13 hours ago -1 votes 0 answers 33 views Vite React keeps crashing in ios26 I am currently developing a website with Vite React. I released my website and it seems to work fine on all devices, except for phones iOS 26. The crash also happens in incognito modus, and I've ... ios reactjs vite ios26 Daniëlle 103 asked 13 hours ago -12 votes 1 answer 117 views products is not defined [closed] I want to try to create a product detail page that will display the product details. However, there is an error in my code. Can you help me? This is my App.tsx code import About from "./pages/... javascript reactjs react-props Afrizal 1 asked 21 hours ago 1 vote 1 answer 39 views Chakra checkbox with preset value can't uncheck on first click Structure React v 18.3.1 Chakra UI v 3.19.1 The Problem In my project I have a react frontend which has a site where I can create and edit authors. For the authors I have an attributes "... reactjs checkbox chakra-ui anvbis 35 asked 22 hours ago 0 votes 1 answer 94 views How to CSS animate a hand-made carousel? I'm working on a React hand-made horizontal carousel component but I'm struggling making an animation to slide the carousel when clicking the respective chevron image. Do you have any idea how to do ... html css reactjs typescript OscarG. 3 asked 23 hours ago Best practices 0 votes 2 replies 29 views Creating a family tree website - need advice I'm building a small personal project for one of my relatives. Here's the plan that I was envisioning: I would have a homepage, 2 buttons and a search bar. Planned features: Button 1: view the entire ... reactjs node.js database data-structures web-development-server Anil Thungesh 1 asked yesterday -3 votes 1 answer 65 views Downloading file on-demand gives network error [duplicate] I'm creating a web game in React, and one of the features will be that you can create your own game file using an interface. I'd like to be able to download the file as a .json, so you can either load ... javascript reactjs Charles Yu 83 asked yesterday 0 votes 0 answers 45 views 'TypeError: (0 , o.UO) is not a function' when using useParams() that doesn't occur in development I have an error that only occurs with the compiled version of my site. The site is deployed on GitHub sites, though I am not sure that is relevant. I have a component at '/articles/:filter' that uses ... reactjs react-router github-pages Crimson in Capitals 9 asked yesterday -2 votes 0 answers 69 views Should I return a cleanup callback in useEffectEvent for compactness? [closed] I'm wondering whether I can return useEffectEvent-related cleanup logic so the useEffect callback invokes them at the end of the component's lifecycle. Here's a somewhat hamfisted example (based on ... reactjs react-hooks NotX 2,598 asked yesterday 1 vote 1 answer 98 views fullscreen api on mobile devices I am writing my custom player on React and I have a problem adapting fullscreen mode for mobile devices. This is what the function looks like now, which puts the component in fullscreen mode (it is ... javascript reactjs arisha 29 asked 2 days ago 0 votes 1 answer 82 views Can we do width transition using TailwindCSS? [closed] Is there any workaround to the style attribute that I am using in the below piece of code? Here I wanted to achieve a progress bar that spans for 3 seconds. So basically mutation.reset() happens after ... javascript reactjs tailwind-css css-transitions Mridu Pawan 9 asked 2 days ago 0 votes 1 answer 41 views Skeletons shrink but cards don't in SimpleGrid when sidebar appears at 1024px breakpoint I have a React app using Chakra UI "@chakra-ui/react": "^3.30.0", with a responsive grid layout. Below 1024px everything works fine, but when the sidebar appears (≥1024px), my ... javascript reactjs chakra-ui react-loading-skeleton Kevin J. Espinoza 9 asked 2 days ago -2 votes 2 answers 62 views How to intercept browser back button / trackpad swipe in React and redirect to a specific route instead of history back [closed] I am building a React application with client-side routing. When the user navigates through multiple pages and then uses the browser back button (or mouse/trackpad back swipe gesture), the app moves ... javascript reactjs react-router react-router-dom jaysingh 1 asked Jan 10 at 4:57 0 votes 2 answers 99 views How do I iterate through an array of JavaScript objects to perform an asynchronous call to a database for each object? [duplicate] I'm trying to get tag data for each blog post I retrieve from the database. In order to do so, I need to first make an asynchronous call to the database to retrieve the blog post data that contains ... javascript reactjs arrays database promise Alden Gillespy 64 asked Jan 9 at 20:28 -1 votes 0 answers 46 views Jest fails with "Module ts-jest not found" and "jest.setup.ts not found" despite npm install (Windows/Monorepo?) [closed] I am trying to run tests in a project that seems to be structured as a monorepo (folder project-folder containing backend and frontend folders), but I am facing persistent path/module resolution ... reactjs node.js typescript jestjs 1Branquinho 1 asked Jan 9 at 10:52 1 vote 1 answer 40 views ViteJS - Returning a promise in a field of a React Hook To migrate from React-Query V3 to V5 (Tanstack/React-Query), I have to change my usage of the lib because of one breaking change: undefined isn't an allowed return value for queryFn anymore. That's ... reactjs vite tanstackreact-query JohnTitour 1 asked Jan 9 at 9:41 -1 votes 0 answers 34 views Couldnt get Laravel/Inertiajs/React project fo production [closed] I tried to get my Laravel/Inertiajs/React/Tailwindcss application to production. I copied my application to /var/www/html, run npm install, npm run build and composer install . After trying out ... reactjs linux laravel apache inertiajs tanzeem 179 asked Jan 9 at 6:36 2 votes 1 answer 80 views Avoid refetching when a requested date range is already covered by cached data I have a calendar component that fetches event data from my backend using TanStack Query, based on a date range. The calendar supports three views: month, week, and day. On initial load, the component ... javascript reactjs react-query Zheng Jiawen 33 asked Jan 9 at 6:11 0 votes 1 answer 57 views React state update properly with keyboard event I have an interesting scenario, I have a react component which maintains a state value and I want to concatenate the next character to it when either the key or an HTML element is pressed. The problem:... javascript reactjs Ubaid 461 asked Jan 9 at 5:36 -1 votes 0 answers 34 views How to bind dynamic path's with real domain? [closed] Let me explain you the situation: So I have a front-end which I will have dynamic route. And in that route I will pass username of my websites registered user's. Using the pathname we will get the ... reactjs typescript react-router architecture frontend Dipto Roy 19 asked Jan 9 at 5:12 -1 votes 0 answers 43 views Unable to set a group of series to solid and other group of series to dashed Use Case My MUI-X Line Chart has a series array of both baseline and comparison values. There will be a comparison line for every baseline line (1 to 1). All baseline lines should be solid and all ... reactjs typescript material-ui mui-x-charts mbooker 1 asked Jan 8 at 18:58 -4 votes 2 answers 56 views How to store data on the client side securely so any component can ask for it [closed] JS cannot read XSS safe Automatically sent reactjs client client-server react-context Jerisha J 1 asked Jan 8 at 9:41 -2 votes 0 answers 35 views IIS Application Pool issue when hosting multiple React applications , backend communication breaks after adding third app [closed] I am hosting multiple React frontend applications under the same IIS Application Pool sites. Current setup: All React apps are deployed as separate IIS applications/sites All of them are mapped to ... reactjs iis shakeer samanthapudi AP221100 1 asked Jan 7 at 10:56 0 votes 1 answer 47 views What is the correct way of using Highcharts with an export button in React? I'm using React 18.3, Highcharts 12.3.0 and highcharts-react-official 3.2.2. I had a problem setting up Highcharts to show the export button before but I somehow managed to make it work with those ... reactjs highcharts react-highcharts mqbaka mqbaka 302 asked Jan 7 at 10:35 -1 votes 0 answers 64 views React cart item not showing product RAM options fetched from MongoDB [closed] I fetch cart items from the database and render them correctly, but RAM options are not displayed in my CartItem component. CartItem component: {props?.productRamData?.length !== 0 && ( &... javascript reactjs mongodb Mahmoud Khosravi 13 asked Jan 7 at 6:42 Advice 0 votes 8 replies 104 views Technical insights on migrating from Vue 3 to React: Benefits in predictability and maintenance In my company, we are considering a full migration from Vue 3 to React for all our products, both those currently in production and those in development. Beyond the library's popularity, we want to ... reactjs typescript vuejs3 micro-frontend hexagonal-architecture Juan Pablo Spiatta 49 asked Jan 6 at 19:39 0 votes 2 answers 72 views AuthJS Session Customization I am building sign-in functionality in Next.js using AuthJS (formerly Next-Auth). I am using the JWT strategy for session management, and would like to augment the session data to include a role, ... javascript reactjs next.js user32151925 1 asked Jan 6 at 18:03 1 vote 1 answer 73 views Expo React Native dependendency Unable to resolve issue I'm working on mobile pet project on Expo React Native. I'm Java developer, that's why there is lack of react knowledge, even some basik consepts can be missed. So, my app was working fine, even ... reactjs react-native expo IurKo 353 asked Jan 6 at 12:01 -2 votes 0 answers 53 views Media Session 'enterpictureinpicture' action handler not triggering in Chrome [closed] I'm trying to implement automatic picture in picture functionality in my React video player using the media session API's enterpictureinpicture action handler, following the guidance here. However, ... javascript reactjs google-chrome picture-in-picture Sanchit 1 asked Jan 5 at 17:42 0 votes 1 answer 73 views Vertical alignment discrepancy between different views in a React sticky header layout I am building a dashboard with React and Tailwind CSS. The layout consists of a sidebar and a main content area. Both the sidebar header and the main content header have a fixed height of h-28 to ... javascript reactjs tailwind-css Steven Tumler 71 asked Jan 4 at 14:30 Advice 0 votes 1 replies 78 views Google Maps reloads tiles as gray when revisiting previously viewed area in @react-google-maps/api I am using @react-google-maps/api^2.20.6 to display Google Maps in my React website. When a user pans or zooms the map, Google Maps loads the tiles correctly. However, when the user moves away and ... javascript reactjs google-maps react-google-maps-api Darshil Modi 19 asked Jan 3 at 12:58 -2 votes 0 answers 91 views fatal error: 'react/utils/CoreFeatures.h' file not found [closed] I have updated my react-native version from ‘0.74.5’ to ‘0.77.3’. Changed kotlin version from "1.9.22" to "2.0.21”. My ndk Version is "27.2.12479018”. During this upgrade, I have ... reactjs react-native react-native-reanimated Archit Gupta 7 asked Jan 3 at 10:11 3 votes 0 answers 100 views React-three/fiber canvas only displaying when I manually alter the viewport I've a project that takes a GLB, breaks it down into the two components and then populates a react-three/fiber canvas. It looks great and gets fully populated by the GLB but only if I go in and ... javascript reactjs three.js react-three-fiber Lucian Lavric 39 asked Jan 2 at 16:20 3 votes 2 answers 100 views Can this React component be fully typed with correct generics and narrowing? Can this React component be typed, such that if the Renderer component is defined, itemList can only be an array of parameters for Renderer, and if Renderer is undefined, itemList can only be an array ... reactjs typescript typescript-generics Peter Villano 59 asked Jan 1 at 22:41 0 votes 1 answer 88 views What is the benefit of another API useEffectEvent over old useRef? Going through the docs and solving the challenges here https://react.dev/learn/separating-events-from-effects#challenges, there is a challenge with a counter and an increment input, but the increment ... reactjs Qwerty 32.5k asked Jan 1 at 16:26 2 votes 1 answer 49 views Responsive Design using Chakra UI Show Component with When property The newer Show component now has a when prop, but no longer has the above or below props. I'm trying to follow along with an exercise to use the Show component to display a grid item only on certain ... javascript reactjs chakra-ui IntoTheBlue 319 asked Dec 31, 2025 at 17:26 1 vote 1 answer 58 views Piechart is not rendering proportionally Why is this code not rendering the piechart proportionally? E.g. if the values are 2:4, it shows 2 as a thin line and the rest for the 4. "use client"; function polarToCartesian(cx: number, ... reactjs typescript Ali 47 asked Dec 31, 2025 at 14:08 Best practices 1 vote 3 replies 75 views How to keep a “global” React Error Boundary config but only show fallback locally? I’m using a React Error Boundary and I understand that when an error is caught, React discards the subtree inside the nearest boundary and renders that boundary’s fallback. Right now I have a single “... javascript reactjs react-error-boundary user26441907 1 asked Dec 30, 2025 at 11:31 -3 votes 0 answers 111 views Why does useEffect placement relative to an “unreachable” early return change child component re-render behavior? [duplicate] Nextjs 16, React 19.2, React Hook Form 7.6 I have encountered a very weird behavior of useEffect and unreachable early return. See here: "use client"; import React, { useState, useEffect } ... reactjs next.js react-hook-form user3257598 295 asked Dec 30, 2025 at 11:29 Best practices 2 votes 2 replies 95 views Best Practices React Native Repositories I'm building an React Native mobile app, so I'm searching for a repository to get as inspiration, because any video or repository I found didn't looks reliable enough to follow as a guide. I'm needing ... android reactjs react-native mobile architecture Samuel Franklin 23 asked Dec 29, 2025 at 18:18 1 vote 0 answers 100 views Is React 18 with react-server-dom canary builds vulnerable to CVE-2025-55182? I’m maintaining a React 18 project and I’m trying to assess the impact of CVE-2025-55182 (React Server Components/"React2Shell"). Most advisories mention affected versions in the React 19 ... javascript reactjs NetKingJ 19 asked Dec 29, 2025 at 8:00 3 votes 3 answers 109 views React Native video player getting resize in landscape mode I am trying to create a react native video player using react native video library and when I switch to landscape mode by clicking on fullscreen icon video playing in landscape mode with full width ... reactjs react-native Shashank Singh 13 asked Dec 28, 2025 at 11:05 1 vote 1 answer 346 views Calling setState synchronously within an effect can trigger cascading renders I get the warning "Calling setState synchronously within an effect can trigger cascading renders" for my useEffect: useEffect(() => { if (positionData.length > 0) { const ... reactjs next.js react-hooks macbas 41 asked Dec 28, 2025 at 9:08 Best practices 0 votes 0 replies 59 views Latest leaf selected in MantineUI Tree component I'm trying to use MantineUI Tree component with very simple tree data: const treeData: TreeNodeData[] = [ { label: "parent 1", value: "1", children: [ ... reactjs mantine edoedoedo 1,671 asked Dec 27, 2025 at 18:12 1 vote 1 answer 44 views Unable to update data in redux toolkit I'm making a CRUD app using Redux Toolkit. It includes all the basic operations, but the Update operation doesn't work as expected. Please take a look at the following code. postSlice.js export const ... javascript reactjs jsx Pranav 1,646 asked Dec 26, 2025 at 11:26 1 vote 2 answers 104 views Expo Router not working in Nx monorepo – stuck on splash / welcome screen What I’ve done so far 1. Installed Expo Router. "expo-router": "~6.0.21" 2. Updated package.json { "main": "expo-router/entry" } 3. Updated app.json { &... reactjs react-native expo nomachine-nx Lasha Dodashvili 11 asked Dec 25, 2025 at 15:14 -2 votes 1 answer 80 views Why Tailwind extension "Tailwind CSS IntelliSence" does not work in tailwind v4.1.18(React js vite) [closed] "Recently, I started styling my website using Tailwind CSS. Since I wasn't familiar with most of the styles, I began using the 'Tailwind CSS IntelliSense' extension, which suggests styles in a ... javascript reactjs tailwind-css Samir 3 asked Dec 25, 2025 at 6:05 1 vote 2 answers 67 views Login session always remains true in Next.js, even after logout Currently i am learning Next JS, as a part of that i am implementing a form with login logout functionality. Also setting cookie and session for the same. My flow is like if logged in shows logout btn ... reactjs next.js ANANTHU C 139 asked Dec 24, 2025 at 7:14 -1 votes 0 answers 71 views React app running in iframe periodically has issues detecting clicks when iframe increases in size I have a React app that is experiencing a random, elusive bug that occurs when the app is running in an iframe (as a ChatGPT app). All areas of the app window are fully clickable when the iframe is ... reactjs iframe FrustrAtion 1 asked Dec 22, 2025 at 18:37 1 2 3 4 5 … 9532 Next The Overflow Blog Now everyone can chat on Stack Overflow Vibe code anything in a Hanselminute Featured on Meta A proposal for bringing back Community Promotion & Open Source Ads Community Asks Sprint Announcement – January 2026: Custom site-specific badges! Policy: Generative AI (e.g., ChatGPT) is banned Modernizing curation: A proposal for The Workshop and The Archive All users on Stack Overflow can now participate in chat Hot Network Questions Fine adjustment of V-brakes Papers with a lot of references to Arxiv manuscripts AI-proof translation for four Chinese characters Does this imputation with mice() make sense? Selecting non-white/non-black color for any given background color Representing a composition of variable sized structures Does the success of physics justify a belief in Physicalism? 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https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/416429/a-proposal-for-bringing-back-community-promotion-open-source-ads | A proposal for bringing back Community Promotion & Open Source Ads - Meta Stack Exchange Skip to main content Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow , the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers. Visit Stack Exchange s-popover#show" data-s-popover-placement="bottom-start" /> Loading… Tour Start here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have What's Meta? 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Explore Stack Internal A proposal for bringing back Community Promotion & Open Source Ads Ask Question Asked 27 days ago Modified 5 days ago Viewed 8k times 62 First introduced in 2009 , Open Source Ads offered the Stack Overflow community the opportunity to propose and approve ads that members thought would be of interest to the community. These ads would dynamically show up in the same spaces regular, paid-for ads would normally show up, as long as they met a specific score threshold. Some time after this, the initiative broadened to the rest of the network with the name Community Promotion Ads, and every year from then until 2020 the initiative would get a yearly refresh (aside from SO, which got it twice a year). In 2021, we tried a somewhat different format , in response to technical needs, as well as the fact that the initiative had then gone ~12 years without any changes. The new format allowed for some more flexibility in the types of ads the community could propose, and the level of targeting they could opt for, but it unfortunately also created a lot more manual work than the Community Management Team could sustain. With many shifting priorities taking place at the time, the initiative ended up being shelved and I didn’t follow-through on sharing the experiment results promised at the time. (The initiative did well as per our advertising benchmarks, by the way! But now it’s a bit past due to share the actual data). It's been five years, but we've finally found the opportunity to relaunch this initiative with some updates to the former process. A proposal for the renewal of Community Promotion & Open Source Ads Back in 2021, our UX Research team conducted some interviews with community members to find out if the community found value in the initiative, and taking aside whether the format could be improved or not, our findings showed that community members valued the opportunity to take advantage of the free ad space to be used to promote initiatives that are highly relevant to them. More importantly, a common theme in the interviews was the fact that this initiative provided an opportunity for community building in a way that is somewhat lacking from other parts of the experience in the network. To us, this seems like a strong enough argument to bring back the initiative, even if we can’t address some of the pain points raised back in 2021 head-on. This brings us to our only constraint for bringing Community Promotion/Open Source Ads back, which is that technical and logistic overhead for staff needs to be fairly minimal. As mentioned previously, the original technical solution for this initiative was retired, and the solution trialed in 2021 generated a lot of logistic work for the Community Management Team. Since we’re unable to prioritize development resources to further automate the process at this time, our solutions for this need to depend on individual communities to collect and curate a list of ads to be passed on to staff. The flipside is that communities will have more freedom surrounding this initiative! The way we envision this, aside from the basics of all proposed ads needing to abide by our Code of Conduct and our advertising guidelines , everything else is much less rigid than any of the prior versions of this initiative. We envision communities on the Stack Exchange network would have the possibility of creating, at any point, a collection post; to define community-specific guidelines for their interests and purposes; as well as their timings for proposing, curating, and refreshing the ads. I don’t want to make it sound like we’re overlooking the fact that this generates more work for the communities, so we may propose some network-wide guidelines/standards in this or other discussions to minimize up front work for communities, if you all feel that would be helpful — but we don’t see this as a requirement, especially if you feel it would restrain the initiative from being effective and actually useful for some specific communities. We think we can iterate on the 2021 trial’s format for what types of ads can be used (Community Promotion Ads, Open Source Ads, and “Hot Network Questions” Ads), but aren’t particularly tied to that. As before, these ads would be shown on any of the available ad spots on sites when there is available inventory, according to the targeting set by the community for each ad (as in the 2021 trial, communities would be able to specify an ad gets shown on just specific placements). The things mentioned in the “Reporting” section on my 2021 post will be reported for communities to be able to measure performance. Before we finalize the details about this initiative, we’ll provide a list of all the technical requirements (like ad size, URL, desired location, etc.) that will need to be met/provided to staff for vetting the community-selected ads, but I’m deliberately avoiding going into those details now (you can look at the 2021 requirements for a notion of what those will look like), given that I’m more interested in debating the idea at a high level, and trying to get some thoughts on the questions below. Open questions As mentioned, we don’t need to land on rules for the initiative that apply network-wide unless doing so would be beneficial for guiding communities through the process, but we do see some questions that would benefit from discussion in order to facilitate the process: Who should/can post a collection post? Do we see this as a mod-only duty, or should any user on a community be able to create a collection post? Who compiles the list of proposed ads to pass along to staff? An answer to this might hinge on the answer to the above question to some extent, but there needs to be someone who hands off a list of community-selected ads to staff (guidance on preferred format TBD). How frequently should communities “refresh” their ads? CMs might need to bundle submissions to the Ad Ops team so they happen at most once per month, allowing for a lot more freshness in the ad campaigns, but maybe some communities would benefit from a slower cadence of ad collection, especially given curation of proposals also takes its time. Are there other “types” of ads you’d like to see? I proposed using the 2021 ad “types” as a reference for what types of ads can be proposed for this initiative — those allowed for promoting external events and resources relevant to a community; highlighting Meta resources and information relevant to that same community; or highlighting canonical questions from your community on other topic-adjacent sites on the network — but it’s possible you can think of other interesting uses of the space for the communities. Timeline There are still details that need to be ironed out, as pointed out above, but I think we can realistically aim for having those finalized at some point in January 2026. Once that happens, I’ll make a post with a finalized set of guidelines for the initiative, so that communities can start their collection posts soon thereafter. Ideally, we can have some initial ad campaigns running before the end of the first quarter of 2026. Conclusion I’m personally excited about bringing this initiative back, as it’s been in limbo since 2021. Despite some of the limitations surrounding coming up with technical solutions, I truly believe this proposal provides a good opportunity for communities to take some ownership of the process, and to get attention to events, projects, or initiatives that are relevant to them! Research conducted in 2021 showed community members found value in keeping the initiative, which has been a big motivator for me to not just drop this initiative. That being said, I’d like to hear from you on the above open questions, as well as more generally what value you find in the initiative, and the proposed format. We’ll be monitoring feedback on this post for 4 weeks, until January 13, 2026 (and might be slightly slower than usual in responding during the last couple of weeks of 2025). discussion company-update featured advertising community-promotion-ads Share Improve this question Follow edited Dec 16, 2025 at 16:14 asked Dec 16, 2025 at 15:53 JNat Staff Mod 28.6k 18 18 gold badges 110 110 silver badges 150 150 bronze badges 20 61 I would never want my community projects associated with Stack Overflow if ads horribly inserted in the middle of content as proposed here . Who wants people to start actively hating their open source project??? That's super-negative publicity. So maybe ditch that other ad proposal before moving ahead with this one? Lundin – Lundin 2025-12-16 16:02:59 +00:00 Commented Dec 16, 2025 at 16:02 12 The way we did this back in 2021, communities could choose what types of ads they were proposing — banner, sidebar, etc. So we could do the exact same thing here, and you (a community) could specify that you wanted your ad to be shown in the regular leaderboard placement (in q&a pages), but not on this new native ad space (in question lists), for example. In other words: an ad doesn't need to be made available on all possible spaces, unless that's something you'd explicitly want ^_^ JNat – JNat Staff Mod 2025-12-16 16:05:58 +00:00 Commented Dec 16, 2025 at 16:05 2 Maybe you should clarify that with an edit on the post, since the community is now pretty hostile towards adds in general, as of that parallel proposal... Just like they are hostile to the new design proposal. It should all supposedly go hand in hand...? Lundin – Lundin 2025-12-16 16:09:40 +00:00 Commented Dec 16, 2025 at 16:09 15 I think what @Lundin meant is that your reputation back in '21 isn't as good as the one you got now. So, they were probably trying to imply that no one would really want to associate with the current company SPArcheon – SPArcheon 2025-12-16 16:11:38 +00:00 Commented Dec 16, 2025 at 16:11 7 @ꓢPArcheon It wasn't good back then either, but indeed it has gotten far worse. More importantly nobody talked about slapping in sneaky adds in the middle of the site content back then, nor slapping various AI trash all across the site and flooding it with strange monochrome icons - all out enshittification until we end up with this . But with extra adds. Err no thanks, I'll pass on being a user of such a site, let alone someone who advertises in the middle of that s***storm for maximum backlash on the poor advertised product/project. Lundin – Lundin 2025-12-16 16:18:05 +00:00 Commented Dec 16, 2025 at 16:18 4 Like the post denotes, research from 2021 showed that community members found the initiative to be of value to them, and as a community-building exercise. It seems like the both of you disagree — inasmuch as "we're unhappy with the company" is a valid viewpoint, I'd be curious to hear your thoughts about why you think the initiative doesn't bring value to communities and their members in a longer format, if you'd be open to putting those thoughts into answers ^_^ JNat – JNat Staff Mod 2025-12-16 16:23:07 +00:00 Commented Dec 16, 2025 at 16:23 35 @JNat I agree with Lundin and SPArcheon. It's not that this initiative doesn't bring value. This initiative in the ad space is coming at the same time as another initiative in the ad space, the "native ads". I, and based on the voting onthe native ads announcement, much of the community, is opposed to the use of native ads. So what I think they (and I) are saying is that I wouldn't promote anything for advertising in a place that uses a deceptive ad format. So unless you nix the "native ads", a lot of people who may want to take advantage of community pomotion ads won't want to. Thomas Owens – Thomas Owens 2025-12-16 16:35:57 +00:00 Commented Dec 16, 2025 at 16:35 5 But I literally just explained (and then edited the post to make it clearer that that's the case) that you don't need to use that space, @ThomasOwens — you can take full advantage of this initiative and not use that space. Presumably, that would mean you get all the "positives" of this initiative, without having to incur any possible "negatives" that the new native ad placements could bring to your community/project/self. What am I missing here? Is your point solely "we don't want native ads?" JNat – JNat Staff Mod 2025-12-16 16:45:10 +00:00 Commented Dec 16, 2025 at 16:45 6 Again, I am not really expressing my view here since i simply have no project to advertise in the first place. I am just trying to point out what the objection Lundin made is. Basically it all points out to this: your choice to use native ads mixed with actual content painted the company as a bad actor in the ads management ecosystem. Therefore they are point out that they don't want to be associated to a bad actor. SPArcheon – SPArcheon 2025-12-16 16:52:44 +00:00 Commented Dec 16, 2025 at 16:52 14 From a brief glance through the post, this looks great! I was just thinking this week that we don't have Community Promotion Ads any more and it's a shame - they were a great way to cross-promote communities to each other as well as various other projects and stuff. I remember spending a lot of time helping to design CPAs for some of my sites to promote on other sites. If community-created ads are coming back, I'm all for it! Rand al'Thor – Rand al'Thor 2025-12-16 16:54:07 +00:00 Commented Dec 16, 2025 at 16:54 4 You say they don't have to use those spaces, but imho that is like saying "our company sells bio tomatoes and endangered species meat, but you don't have to buy the meat to buy the tomatoes...". I think their point is that if they think bad of the company choices, they can't simply "ignore the bad part and use another service" SPArcheon – SPArcheon 2025-12-16 16:54:51 +00:00 Commented Dec 16, 2025 at 16:54 18 "This initiative's potential value is rendered neutral by the fact that you are rolling out native ads (...)" seems like a valid point of view, which I think could stand as an answer so the rest of the community can up- or down-vote it and discuss in the comments. I think I'm struggling a bit here because the critiques before seemed more about the company's standing with the community, as well as the native ads initiative, and I'm trying to understand how y'all feel about this initiative , whether you see value in it, and how it can be run in the best way possible. JNat – JNat Staff Mod 2025-12-16 17:07:09 +00:00 Commented Dec 16, 2025 at 17:07 7 We've generally not had worries around those issues in the past, to my recollection, @starball These have generally not been used by companies, and that is indeed not the intended usage — for that reason we've generally taken the score of proposed ads to accurately reflect the communities' interest in those ads being shown on their sites, etc. I imagine that, in cases where someone raises concerns about how a particular proposal is faring, we could investigate and make sure nothing weird seems to be taking place, though. JNat – JNat Staff Mod 2025-12-17 11:39:47 +00:00 Commented Dec 17, 2025 at 11:39 11 It's not just about where the ad is placed btw. Nobody professional want their product to be seen next to snake oil & porn - yes, SO are still showing such adds in 2025. Nobody professional would even want snake oil and porn adverts on their web page in the first place. Lundin – Lundin 2025-12-17 11:47:37 +00:00 Commented Dec 17, 2025 at 11:47 7 The core problem is that SO isn't a professional company, or it would immediately have stopped all cooperation with the snake oil/porn vendor. Like back in year 2019 when the site was flooded with bad ads, from which the company learnt: absolutely nothing. Lundin – Lundin 2025-12-17 11:48:10 +00:00 Commented Dec 17, 2025 at 11:48 | Show 5 more comments 7 Answers 7 Sorted by: Reset to default Highest score (default) Date modified (newest first) Date created (oldest first) 82 This is my take on the discussion in the comments, such as those by Lundin , SPArcheon , and myself . I don't think you should be wasting your time on this. If you had posted this on December 7, the reaction would be different. But you posted this on December 16, a little over a week after announcing "native ads" . Fundamentally, the question is this: Why would I want to promote something on the SO platform? Advertising on the platform is becoming deceptive with the introduction of native ads. Why would I want my product, service, project, community, or other thing advertised on a platform that has deceptive ads ( 1 , 2 , and more)? Or is shoving AI (via AI Assist) down the throats of people who don't want it ( 1 , 2 , and more)? You can't view initiatives in isolation, as suggested in a comment . Although this may be a good idea in isolation, other things invalidate any interest in spending time on it. The fact that our feedback on those other initiatives doesn't change anything doesn't help justify spending time giving feedback on this one, even if it may be something that we'd otherwise want to see. Share Improve this answer Follow answered Dec 16, 2025 at 19:33 Thomas Owens 65.2k 20 20 gold badges 120 120 silver badges 220 220 bronze badges 5 13 The staff has commented that "You don't need to use that space" in the question. I appreciate that this answer has made it clear that the problem is not "this space" or "that space". The problem is that having your product associated with a platform that pushes for deceptive ads and disregards community consensus is just not considered a positive thing to begin with. Weijun Zhou – Weijun Zhou 2025-12-17 08:56:23 +00:00 Commented Dec 17, 2025 at 8:56 9 Appreciate the point of view! You're misrepresenting my ask, as I wasn't inviting you to think about this proposal in a vacuum, and the opening of my comment you point to makes that evident enough, I think. More to the point: are you really of the opinion that this shouldn't even be an option that communities can use, or not, then? I understand your points of view surrounding native ads, and how that impacts this initiative, but isn't not going ahead with even creating the possibility that communities might choose to use (or ignore!) this program throwing the baby out with the bathwater? JNat – JNat Staff Mod 2025-12-17 12:13:15 +00:00 Commented Dec 17, 2025 at 12:13 16 @JNat Yes, this shouldn't be an option. Investing company and/or community resources on developing, curating, and managing this is wasteful as long as the advertising elements are being ruined and feedback on multiple initiatives is being ignored. Solve real problems instead. Thomas Owens – Thomas Owens 2025-12-17 13:25:51 +00:00 Commented Dec 17, 2025 at 13:25 12 This feels like a gimmick to improve community sentiment about ads in general, after the deeply unpopular native ads announcement. BonsaiOak – BonsaiOak 2025-12-24 20:47:58 +00:00 Commented Dec 24, 2025 at 20:47 3 @JNat The company has lost what little trust the community had left in it with the AI and native ads, among other things. I think the point is nobody's interested in cooperating to improve your revenue source with these ad recommendations when the relationship between users and management is so antagonistic right now. Addressing the actual issues people are worried about might be a better path forward than what honestly feels like a distraction/consolation prize. Rumi-SE Must Follow the CC-SA – Rumi-SE Must Follow the CC-SA 2026-01-03 20:14:29 +00:00 Commented Jan 3 at 20:14 Add a comment | 16 I think this is wonderful to see. That's good news. Thank you! I think it would be reasonable to have mods create the collection post and bundle up the results to CMs. I think that'll keep it simpler for CMs. I think it would be reasonable to collect community ads once per year. Once per month seems far too often. I don't think you need to add new ad types at the moment; that sounds like something that could be adjusted over time, but just bringing back community ads sounds like great progress, and no need to let these details block or slow down moving forward with this. Share Improve this answer Follow answered Dec 16, 2025 at 20:34 D.W. 16.6k 5 5 gold badges 35 35 silver badges 71 71 bronze badges 3 2 If I'm understanding you correctly, you're saying we should run with a format as close to the 2021 one as possible, aside from the ad collection mechanics (which would be undertaken by mods), right? I agree that 1/year seems reasonable for most communities, but I think it might be ok to leave that open for each community to decide for themselves, since some might require a slightly faster refresh, though. Do you believe that should be a part of network-wide guidelines that apply to all communities? JNat – JNat Staff Mod 2025-12-17 11:50:39 +00:00 Commented Dec 17, 2025 at 11:50 1 @JNat, Basically, yeah. That all makes sense to me. I can't claim to know what you should do, but what you are suggesting is the approach that comes to mind for me. I don't have an opinion between "1/year for everyone" or "1/year as default, each site can decide for something different". To me it feels important that it should be sustainable and manageable for CMs so they don't have a lot of extra workload (so that this program can continue in the future), and I don't have a good reading on whether opening up the possibility of lots of exceptions for different sites adds to CM workload. D.W. – D.W. 2025-12-18 04:59:30 +00:00 Commented Dec 18, 2025 at 4:59 1/year sounds too infrequent, perhaps 4/year (quarterly) would be a good balance between staying new and relevant vs the amount of work Ben Voigt – Ben Voigt 2026-01-08 18:22:35 +00:00 Commented Jan 8 at 18:22 Add a comment | 16 I'm sure that open-source and community projects will embrace this initiative wholeheartedly, so that they too can have their advertisements displayed in deliberately misleading ways that completely destroy any respect that anyone might have had for said project . See also: numbers 2 and 3 here . Share Improve this answer Follow answered Dec 17, 2025 at 13:24 Ian Kemp - SE killed by LLMs 4,928 1 1 gold badge 23 23 silver badges 22 22 bronze badges 2 Sarcasm? I'd agree on your point, though. John – John 2026-01-05 15:45:44 +00:00 Commented Jan 5 at 15:45 2 Sarcasm is what I do, yes. Ian Kemp - SE killed by LLMs – Ian Kemp - SE killed by LLMs 2026-01-06 13:33:58 +00:00 Commented Jan 6 at 13:33 Add a comment | 13 The way we envision this, aside from the basics of all proposed ads needing to abide by our Code of Conduct and our advertising guidelines , everything else is much less rigid than any of the prior versions of this initiative. In the 2021 version, there was an additional stipulation: Finally, ads can not be promoting products nor soliciting programmer time or resources for: knowledge sharing or collaboration tools for technologists, or for sites where ad buyers are primarily targeting technologists. The first part was specifically included to forbid the advertisements for Codidact and TopAnswers. Can we safely assume that this additional restriction no longer applies to the rebooted Community Promotion Ads? The second part of this stipulation was completely unnecessary, since we'd never upvote an ad for one of those sleazy "we have the same audience, but our ad slots are cheaper!" sites. I'd recommend you forbid those generally , except that tracking users via personalised ad networks skews the incentives such that the locally-optimal play is to accept the money. If you don't update the advertising guidelines, I'd recommend not re-instating this stipulation. Share Improve this answer Follow answered Dec 16, 2025 at 21:54 wizzwizz4 35.2k 8 8 gold badges 74 74 silver badges 127 127 bronze badges 7 7 I'll need to double-check on whether that first stipulation still applies or not (I would guess some version of it might, since it basically means "you can't advertise for a 'competitor'" [by some definitions of 'competitor'] which feels like a reasonable restriction by most counts). I'll report back once I find out. JNat – JNat Staff Mod 2025-12-17 11:47:32 +00:00 Commented Dec 17, 2025 at 11:47 14 @JNat There is no clear line. MathOverflow does not run ads or have HNQs, so is functionally equivalent to Codidact. And I don't believe anti-competitive behaviour is reasonable for a company hosting communities based around collaborative knowledge-sharing. Stack Exchange made its name by competing on merit and genuinely being better : the only reason to forbid such advertisements is if you believe you cannot do that any more. (I, for one, see no reason you can't: the Codidact web interface is bad, TopAnswers isn't the same kind of thing as SE, and neither have large communities.) wizzwizz4 – wizzwizz4 2025-12-17 14:43:46 +00:00 Commented Dec 17, 2025 at 14:43 1 Fair points! I'll take them all into consideration as I bring this up internally ^_^ JNat – JNat Staff Mod 2025-12-18 14:35:38 +00:00 Commented Dec 18, 2025 at 14:35 2 Why would we want to allow adverts for codidact, a site that was basically invented to try to screw SE over? Richard – Richard 2025-12-19 09:28:48 +00:00 Commented Dec 19, 2025 at 9:28 10 @Richard That isn't at all why Codidact was founded. The Codidact website doesn't explain, but TopAnswers does : nothing in there about trying to hurt SE. Surpass, perhaps, but if the existence of Codidact and TopAnswers stops SE shooting itself in the foot quite so much, that's mission accomplished. wizzwizz4 – wizzwizz4 2025-12-19 14:21:37 +00:00 Commented Dec 19, 2025 at 14:21 4 Codadict exists because Stack Exchange "management" decided to screw its sites' users over. Ian Kemp - SE killed by LLMs – Ian Kemp - SE killed by LLMs 2025-12-19 22:51:43 +00:00 Commented Dec 19, 2025 at 22:51 7 @IanKemp-SEkilledbyLLMs That was the catalyst , but the underlying systems (e.g. QPixel) were already being built before the inciting incidents that led to Codidact's founding. If not for those incidents, something like Codidact would still probably have been built, albeit perhaps a year or two later, and with stronger ties to Stack Exchange. Diversity is nearly always a good thing. wizzwizz4 – wizzwizz4 2025-12-20 04:12:20 +00:00 Commented Dec 20, 2025 at 4:12 Add a comment | -1 I think since the pages on my widescreen monitor are just blank white on the sidebars, there's room for an ad or two. But please integrate it with the users of this site. There are a lot of software engineers on here. Wouldn't it be great if they could advertise at a discounted rate on their favorite site. A site to which they have contributed many answers/questions and helped bolster (for free). Especially if the project / product they'd like to advertise is about mathematics itself. Addendum : wouldn't it be great also if the Q&A pages that you advertise on, if the users who wrote the content on that page get a small cut of the ad revenue? That's the only fair way to go about this. If not, then I vote no ads. Share Improve this answer Follow edited Jan 1 at 3:25 answered Jan 1 at 3:19 EffingLoveMath 132 6 6 bronze badges 0 Add a comment | -6 Would you or do you have metrics or measurement technique in place to rate the projects that can be promoted Do this ad is based on upfront payment to be made by the project owner to publish their products? Is this news about posting an ad in a community channel ? Is this intention to improve the computational sustainability and efficiency? Is this an effort to get rid of bloatware from the community and solve better problems? Suggestion for ads - Why not keep the ads section out of newsfeed and be published in a different page, personalised to the user ? For example, lets say, I visit ads.stackoverflow.com, then i expect to see the ads targeted for me. If there are users with legitimate needs, they can pick the one from the list of published ads. In my opinion, the feed is a an infinite scrollable page. This is a bad experience at the modern trend, if you opt for injecting ads in these section, the entire effort to get it done, may become obsolete. unless you have a design to code tech in the pipeline set up for the engineering and the design team, you can get them reverted pretty quick. Instead, move ads to a different page away from the feed, meanwhile, cleanup the current feed contents. It contains useless information on a most recent post bases and poor metrics to capture the most important posts based on points. Have a system in place, that can measure the usefulness or the weightage of a question towards computational efficiency, use it to sort the questions to be shown to the users. The post ranking system is Obsolete! with such an important feature in place and in need, checking with the groups about a placement of the ads is misuse of your precious time Comment response main vision of stackexchange or stackoverflow is to support fellow computer programmers, who are new, and trying to learn. This was the past, but sticking to the same doesn't take us anywhere. For example, having multiple programming languages in the world is pointless, all does the same job, consider a newbie enters a computer world, finding that there are multiple choices, this causes brain hurt. Keeping the newbies or future visitors of the forum, and computer science in consideration, both the readers / viewers and the computational technology should merge towards single vision, and not deviate. For example, this post is a good initiative, but in my opinion, and in my eyes, i do not see it happening. here is what im based of. duplicate programming languages, duplicate OS. For now its political or geographical, but once the dominant leaders are passed over, then it becomes responsibility of an individual to clean up the bloatware from the system. Programming languages are bloatwares, Operating systems are bloatwares. All does the same job, user talking to the hardware or user talking to another user through hardware or hardware talking to hardware. Cleaning programming languages with a code degenerator (fiction) to a standard language and code generation( R&D) targeting a programming langauge solves programming language issue. Like wise i see the challenge with the operating system as well. Please note, all my thoughts are biased based on my finding of a visual language. To support my conviction on a visual language because it crosses language barrier across the globe. Share Improve this answer Follow edited Dec 20, 2025 at 16:32 answered Dec 19, 2025 at 9:31 Vetrivel 113 2 2 bronze badges 2 7 1. I state the proposed performance metrics in the post; 2. This initiative provides free ad space for the community; 3. I don't understand what you mean by this question, can you clarify?; 4. and 5. It is unclear how these are related to any of what this post is about, can you clarify? JNat – JNat Staff Mod 2025-12-19 10:15:48 +00:00 Commented Dec 19, 2025 at 10:15 Added in the answer. Thanks for your comment, lets establish a common ground. it will allow me to communicate effectively about 4 and 5 Vetrivel – Vetrivel 2025-12-20 16:33:14 +00:00 Commented Dec 20, 2025 at 16:33 Add a comment | -9 Just one man's opinion since you're asking, This all seems very unimportant and marginal. Imagine a planet (say, Earth) was on the verge of AGI, and the planet's leading technical professional interchange (say, Stackoverflow) was suddenly fussing around about some totally minor irrelevancy. Well - hey! You know how companies (say, around 2000) would do "green-washing". So, whether actually helping "environmental" issues, or merely running TV ads pretending they were into "environmental" issues, they jumped on the "environmentalism" bandwagon and (basically) got publicity and maybe some kudos out of it. Nowadays, no companies bother doing "green-washing" anymore because it's yesterday's issue, nobody gives a damn anymore and there's no marketing traction in it. I have to say, honest opinion, (A) this whole effort seems like "open source -washing", and indeed (B) nobody gives a crap anymore about open source, it's just not top of mind, it's not a hot-button political/social issue and (C) the whole issue is just so minor and detailed and unimportant it's just a waste of time. Anyway - just one man's opinion. Take care! Share Improve this answer Follow answered Jan 7 at 18:55 Fattie 706 4 4 silver badges 12 12 bronze badges Add a comment | You must log in to answer this question. Start asking to get answers Find the answer to your question by asking. 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https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_94 | September 2024 (version 1.94) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 September 2024 (version 1.94) Update 1.94.1 : The update addresses this security issue . Update 1.94.2 : The update addresses these issues . Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the September 2024 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Find in Explorer - Quickly find files in the Explorer view with the improved Find control. Source Control Graph - More filtering options and interactivity in the Source Control Graph. Python test coverage - Run Python tests with coverage and get rich results in the editor. ESM - Faster VS Code startup thanks to the migration to ESM. Account preference - Specify which account to use for an extension. Copilot in Native REPL - Get code completions and Inline Chat in the Native REPL. Improved chat context - Drag & drop files or use IntelliSense for more relevant chat context. Test environment setup - Get help with setting up a test framework for your workspace. If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. GitHub Copilot Switch language models in chat Previously, we announced that you can sign up for early access to OpenAI o1 models . Once you have access, you will have a Copilot Chat model picker control in Copilot Chat in VS Code to choose which model version to use for your chat conversations. GPT-4o in Inline Chat We've upgraded Copilot Inline Chat to GPT-4o, to give you faster, more accurate, and higher-quality code and explanations when you use Chat in the editor. Public code matching in chat You can allow GitHub Copilot to return code that could match publicly available code on GitHub.com. When this functionality is enabled for your organization subscription or personal subscription , Copilot code completions already provided you with details about the matches that were detected. We now show you these matches for public code in Copilot Chat as well. If this is enabled for your organization or subscription, you might see a message at the end of the response with a View matches link. If you select the link, an editor opens that shows you the details of the matching code references with more details. Get more information about code referencing in GitHub Copilot on the GitHub Blog. File suggestions in chat In chat input fields, you can now type #<filename> to get file name suggestions and quickly attach them to your prompt as context. This works in chat locations that support file attachments, such as the Chat view, Quick Chat, Inline Chat, and Notebook Chat. Improved file links in chat responses We've improved the rendering of any workspace file paths that are mentioned in Copilot responses. These paths are very common when you ask @workspace questions. The first thing you'll notice, is that paths to workspace files now include a file icon. This enables you to easily distinguish them in the chat response. The file icon is based on your current file icon theme . These paths are interactive links, so just select them to open the corresponding file. You can even use drag and drop to open the file in a new editor group, or insert it into a text editor by holding Shift before dropping. By default, these links only show the file name but you can hover over them to see the full file path. You can also right-click on one of these paths to open a context menu with additional commands, such as copying a relative path to the resource, or revealing the file in your operating system's file explorer. We plan to further improve workspace path rendering in the coming iterations, as well as make similar improvements to symbol names in responses. Drag and drop files to add chat context You can now easily attach additional files as context for a chat prompt by dragging files or editor tabs from the workbench directly into chat. For Inline Cat, hold Shift and drop a file to add it as context instead of opening it in the editor. File attachments included in history There are multiple ways to attach a file or editor selection as relevant context to your chat request. Previously, this context was added only for the current request and was not included in the history of follow-on requests. Now, these attachments are kept in history, so that you can keep referring to them without having to reattach them. Inline Chat and completions in Python native REPL The native REPL editor, used by the Python extension, now supports Copilot Inline Chat and code completions directly in the input box. Accept and run generated code in notebook When you use Copilot Inline Chat to generate code in a notebook, you can now accept and directly run the generated code from Inline Chat. Attach variables in notebook chat When you use Copilot in a notebook, you can now attach variables from the Jupyter kernel in your requests. Adding variables gives you more precise control over the context for your chat request, so that you get more relevant responses from Copilot. Either type # , followed by the variable name, or use the 📎 control ( ⌘/ (Windows, Linux Ctrl+/ ) ) in Inline Chat to add a context variable. Refreshed chat user experience We've refreshed the Chat view with a clean new welcome experience, and we've updated the layout of the chat input area. You can now use the @ button to easily find the list of available chat participants and slash commands, both the built-in ones and chat participants from extensions that you've installed. You can also still find participants and slash commands by typing / or @ in the chat input box. Semantic search results (Preview) Setting : github.copilot.chat.search.semanticTextResults The Search view enables you to perform an exact search across your files. We have now added functionality to the Search view that uses Copilot to give search results that are semantically relevant. This functionality is still in preview and by default, the setting is not enabled. Try it out and let us know what you think! Fix test failure (Preview) Setting : github.copilot.chat.fixTestFailure.enabled We've added specialized logic to help you to diagnose failing unit tests. This logic is triggered in some scenarios by the /fix slash command, and you can also invoke it directly with the /fixTestFailure slash command. The command is enabled in chat by default but can be disabled via the setting github.copilot.chat.fixTestFailure.enabled . Automated test setup (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.experimental.setupTests.enabled We added an experimental /setupTests slash command that can help you configure the testing set up for your workspace. This command can recommend a testing framework, provide steps to set up and configure it, and suggest a VS Code extension to provide testing integration in VS Code . This can save you time and effort to get started with testing for your code. When you use the /tests command to generate tests for your code, it can recommend /setupTests and testing extensions if looks like such an integration has not been set up yet in your workspace. Start debugging from Chat (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.experimental.startDebugging.enabled In this milestone, we made improvements to the experimental /startDebugging slash command. This command enables you to easily find or create a launch configuration and start debugging your application seamlessly. When you use @vscode in Copilot Chat, /startDebugging is now available by default. Chat in Command Center (Experimental) Setting : chat.commandCenter.enabled We are experimenting with a Command Center entry for accessing chat. It provides quick access to all relevant chat commands, like starting the different chat experiences or attaching context to your prompt. Note that the Command Center itself needs to be enabled for the chat Command Center entry to show. Improved temporal context (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.experimental.temporalContext.enabled With temporal context, you can instruct Inline Chat to consider recently opened or edited files as part of the chat context. We have improved this feature and invite everyone to give it a go. Custom instructions (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.experimental.codeGeneration.useInstructionFiles Setting : github.copilot.chat.experimental.testGeneration.instructions Last milestone, we introduced custom code-generation instructions . We've further expanded this functionality to define shared instructions for code generation in a .github/copilot-instructions.md file in your workspace. These common instructions supplement your own personal code generation instructions. Enable the code-generation instruction file with the github.copilot.chat.experimental.codeGeneration.useInstructionFiles setting. In addition, you can now define instructions for test generation in settings or import them from a file. For example, if you always want to use a particular unit testing framework for your tests. Configure the test-generation instructions in the github.copilot.chat.experimental.testGeneration.instructions setting. Accessibility Getting started Our Help menu now includes a Get Started with Accessibility Features walkthrough, which makes it easier for you to explore and utilize the accessibility options. The walkthrough introduces you to functionality, such as the accessibility help dialog, accessibility signals, keyboard shortcuts, and more. Comment accessibility improvements We have introduced an accessible view for comment thread controls. This view includes the relevant editor context, enabling you to stay focused without needing to switch between the editor and the accessible view. Likewise, the editor context is now provided in the accessible view for the comments panel. We've also introduced the Comments: Focus Comment on Current Line command that lets you quickly move to the Comments control from the Editor by using the keyboard. There are also new actions to go to the next and previous commented ranges in the Editor: Comments: Go to Next Commented Range and Comments: Go to Previous Commented Range . Workbench Change an extension's account preference In this iteration, we explored how to improve the experience of changing the preferred account for an extension. For example, if you have multiple GitHub accounts and you accidentally signed in to GitHub Copilot with the wrong account and now need to use the other one. It's now possible to change that preference after the fact in multiple ways. Account menu in the Activity Bar > <Your Account> > Manage Trusted Extensions > select the gear icon for an extension Extensions view > context menu (or gear icon) on an extension that uses auth > select Account Preferences Extension detail view > gear icon > select Account Preferences Choosing any of these options takes you to a Quick Pick where you can change the account that an extension uses. When you change an extension's account preference, this sends an event to the extension and it is up to the extension to handle it properly. If you don't see the expected behavior, report an issue going for that extension, so the account preference experience can be handled. Also, let us know if you have any feedback on this flow. View folders and workspaces associated with a profile In this milestone, we introduced a Folders & Workspaces section in the Profiles editor. This section lists all folders and workspaces that are associated with a specific profile from a central place. From this section, you can add or modify folders, or open the folder or workspace in a new window. Update extensions across all profiles In this milestone, we introduced the ability to update extensions across all profiles. This is useful if you have multiple profiles and you want to keep your extensions versions in sync. Previously, you had to switch to each profile and update the extensions for that profile. Warnings in the Extensions view The Extensions view now shows a warning badge and associated information when there are any invalid extensions or extensions that are disabled due to version incompatibility. Find in Explorer We’ve improved the Find feature in the Explorer view to make it easier to search for files in large projects. You can open the Find control in the File Explorer by using the ⌥⌘F (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Alt+F ) keyboard shortcut. While searching, you can switch between fuzzy matching and continuous matching for more flexible results. Note that some context menu actions are temporarily disabled during searches. Stay tuned for more improvements coming soon! Release notes We have a simplified syntax for referring to settings in our release notes ( setting.name ), which also has the now-familiar settings-gear rendering when displayed in the release notes editor. Editor Inlay hint improvements We have added the editor.inlayHints.maximumLength setting, which controls after how many characters inlay hints are truncated. We have also revised the updating strategy for inlay hints and now, while typing, they should update sooner but not cause any horizontal movements of your cursor. Experimental Edit Context This milestone, we introduced a new experimental setting editor.experimentalEditContextEnabled . This setting enables the EditContext API to power the editing experience in VS Code. The adoption of the EditContext API has enabled us to fix certain IME composition bugs. Generally we believe it will improve the editing experience in the long term, and ultimately it will be enabled by default. Make sure to reload your VS Code window after enabling this setting to take advantage of it. Source Control Source Control Graph view improvements Last milestone, we added the new Source Control Graph view. This milestone, we have been working on expanding the functionality available in the newly added view as well as polishing the layout of the view. Repository picker When you open a folder/workspace that contains multiple repositories, the Source Control Graph view title shows a repository picker. By default, the Source Control Graph view shows the active repository, matching the information in the Status Bar. You can use the repository picker to lock the Source Control Graph view to a particular repository. History item reference picker This milestone, we have added a new history item reference picker to the Source Control Graph view title. You can use this reference picker to filter the history items shown in the graph to a different branch, or to view multiple branches. By default the history item reference picker is set to Auto , which renders the graph for the current history item reference, its remote, and an optional base. History item actions This milestone, we have expanded the list of actions that are available in the context menu for source control history items. We have added actions to create a new branch/tag from a history item, cherry-pick a history item, and checkout (detached) an item. Source Control Graph settings This milestone, we have added a set of new settings, so that you can customize the graph: scm.graph.badges - controls which badges are shown in the Source Control Graph view scm.graph.pageOnScroll - controls whether the Source Control Graph view loads the next page of items when you scroll to the end of the list scm.graph.pageSize - the default number of items to show in the Source Control Graph view and when loading more items Notebooks Multi cursor support across cells (preview) The Notebook editor now supports multi-cursor editing between cells with the setting notebook.multiCursor.enabled . Currently, this can only be triggered with the shortcut Ctrl+D and supports core editor actions alongside a limited subset of editor commands. Diff editor shows document metadata changes The notebook diff editor now also shows changes made to the document metadata, such as kernel information and cell language. Collapse unchanged regions in diff view The notebook diff view now respects the setting diffEditor.hideUnchangedRegions.enabled . When enabled, unchanged code blocks are collapsed by default, which makes reviewing changes in large notebooks easier. Notebook serialization in web worker (Experimental) This release introduces an experimental feature that enables notebook serialization in a web worker. This can help reduce main thread blocking time in the Extension Host process when you work with large notebooks. By default, this feature is disabled but can be enabled by setting ipynb.experimental.serialization to true . Debug Support for data colorization VS Code supports new text styling capabilities from the Debug Adapter Protocol. This enables data in the Variables view, Watch view, hovers, and Debug Console to be colorized via ANSI escape sequences. JavaScript Debugger Improved display of HTML elements We've improved how HTML elements are displayed in the JavaScript debugger. Previously, they were rendered as naive objects, which were hard to navigate. Now, they more closely reflect DOM structure, and we take advantage of new colorization capabilities to provide some basic syntax highlighting. Autocomplete of Node commands in launch configuration There is a new autocompletion helper available in launch.json files for command-line applications that are installed in your node_modules . This makes it easier to set up debugging for tools like vitest or nest . Cleaner Loaded Sources view We changed how source paths are structured for Node.js built-in modules, evaluated scripts, and WebAssembly modules to make the Loaded Sources view less noisy and easier to browse. Languages TypeScript 5.6 Our JavaScript and TypeScript support now uses TypeScript 5.6. This major update includes a number of language and tooling improvements, along with important bug fixes and performance optimizations. You can read all about the TypeScript 5.6 release on the TypeScript blog . We've also included a few tooling highlights in the following sections. Detection of some common 'always true' programming mistakes Say you're using a regular expression in JavaScript or TypeScript and write some code like this: const str = '...' if ( /\d + ( \. \d + ) ? / ) { ... } else { ... } Uh oh! Looks like we've forgotten to call .test() on the regular expression, meaning that the if conditional always evaluates to true. That's not what we want. Even though this problem is obvious when pointed out, mistakes like this are surprisingly easy to make and have even caused real bugs in VS Code! Thankfully, TypeScript now reports some of the most common 'always true' errors in your program. This includes testing an if conditional against a value that is never value, or a conditional expression where the one side is unreachable, such as /abc/ ?? /xyz/ . Check out the TypeScript release notes for more examples and details about how this feature works. Region prioritized diagnostics Working in a very long JavaScript or TypeScript file? You should start seeing diagnostics for type error show up a little faster thanks to region prioritized diagnostics. This means that we try to get the diagnostics for the current visible code and show these first, even if the diagnostics for the rest of the file are still being computed. This optimization is most relevant for complex files with thousands and thousands of lines. You may not notice any changes for smaller files. Improved commit character for JavaScript and TypeScript Commit characters can speed up coding by automatically accepting completions when typed. For example, in JavaScript and TypeScript, . is often considered a commit character. This means to type myVariable.property. , you can just type myv , . , p , . with the first . accepting the completion for myVariable and the second . accepting the completion for property . These commit characters are now computed by TypeScript, which means that they can better take the program's structure into account. We can also continue improving our support for them over time. Commit characters are enabled by default but can be disabled by setting editor.acceptSuggestionOnCommitCharacter to false . Exclude Patterns for Auto-Imports The new autoImportSpecifierExcludeRegexes lets you exclude auto import from specific packages by using a regular expression. For example, to exclude auto imports from the subdirectory of a module like lodash, you can set: { "typescript.preferences.autoImportSpecifierExcludeRegexes" : [ "^lodash/.*$" ] } You can configure this by using javascript.preferences.autoImportSpecifierExcludeRegexes for JavaScript and typescript.preferences.autoImportSpecifierExcludeRegexes for TypeScript. For more details see the TypeScript 5.6 release notes Remote Development The Remote Development extensions , allow you to use a Dev Container , remote machine via SSH or Remote Tunnels , or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. Highlights include: Attach to a Kubernetes container over SSH/Tunnel Manually specify GPU availability You can learn more about these features in the Remote Development release notes . Contributions to extensions Python Run tests with coverage You can now run Python tests with coverage in VS Code! To run tests with coverage, select the coverage run icon in the Test Explorer or “Run with coverage” from any menu you normally trigger test runs from. The Python extension will run coverage by using the pytest-cov plugin if you are using pytest, or with coverage.py for unittest. Once the coverage run is complete, lines are highlighted in the editor for line level coverage. These can be closed and re-opened via the Run Results panel in the bottom, where it says "Close Test Coverage" or "View Test Coverage" under the most recent test run. Additionally, a Test Coverage tab appears below the Testing tab in the Test Explorer, also with a beaker icon, which you can also navigate to with Testing: Focus on Test Coverage View in Command Palette ( ⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P ) ). On this panel you can view line and branch coverage metrics for each file and folder in your workspace. For more information on running Python tests with coverage, see our Python documentation . For general information on test coverage, see VS Code's Test Coverage documentation . Python default problem matcher The Python extension now includes a default problem matcher, simplifying issue tracking in your Python code and offering more contextual feedback. To integrate it, add "problemMatcher": "$python" to your tasks in task.json . A problem matcher scans the task's output for errors and warnings and displays them in the Problems panel, enhancing your development workflow. Below is an example of a task.json file that uses the default problem matcher for Python: { "version" : "2.0.0" , "tasks" : [ { "label" : "Run Python" , "type" : "shell" , "command" : "${command:python.interpreterPath}" , "args" : [ "${file}" ], "problemMatcher" : "$python" } ] } Shell integration in Python terminal REPL The Python extension now includes a setting to opt in and out of PYTHONSTARTUP script, which runs before you type python or any other way to launch the Python REPL in the terminal. If you opt in, you can use features from terminal shell integrations, such as command decorations, re-run command, run recent commands, if they are in Mac or Linux. You can enable this via setting python.terminal.shellIntegration.enabled . Pylance Language Server Mode There's a new setting python.analysis.languageServerMode that enables you to choose between our current IntelliSense experience or a lightweight one that is optimized for performance. If you don't require the full breadth of IntelliSense capabilities and prefer Pylance to be as resource-friendly as possible, you can set python.analysis.languageServerMode to light . Otherwise, to continue with the experience you have with Pylance today, you can set it to default . This new functionality overrides the default values of the following settings: Setting light mode default mode "python.analysis.exclude" ["**"] [] "python.analysis.useLibraryCodeForTypes" false true "python.analysis.enablePytestSupport" false true "python.analysis.indexing" false true The settings above can still be changed individually to override the default values. GitHub Pull Requests There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests extension, which enables you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. Review the changelog for the 0.98.0 release of the extension to learn about the highlights. Extension Authoring Remove custom allocator in the desktop app In this version, we have removed the custom allocator that was added in version 1.78 to the desktop application extension host. This custom allocator acts as a bridge for supporting V8 sandbox incompatible Node.js native addons that are built against the Electron runtime. You can refer to this tracking issue for additional context. We have ensured that the top 5000 extensions are unaffected by this change. If your extension or a dependency of your extension is affected by this change, you can try the following remediation suggestions: If your extension uses n-api then the status napi_no_external_buffers_allowed will be returned when using external array buffers. In which case, you can switch to use the copy version of the API napi_create_buffer_copy . If your extension uses node-addon-api then refer to this document for alternative API and compile time settings. If you want to avoid the performance cost from the copy, you can use the V8 allocator to ensure that the buffer backing store is compatible with the V8 sandbox. We have also added telemetry to identify extensions and native addons that might be affected, so we can proactively reach out to extension authors and offer help where possible. If your extension is effected, and none of the above suggestions work for you, comment in our discussion thread and we will gladly help. Debug Adapter Protocol We formalized how text can be colorized and styled in the display of variables and output in the Debug Adapter Protocol . Colorization works via ANSI control sequences and require that both the client and debug adapter supportsANSIStyling in their initialize request and capabilities, respectively. Preview Features Multiple GitHub accounts It's now possible to be logged in to multiple GitHub accounts in VS Code at the same time. This functionality is enabled by default in VS Code Insiders. In Stable builds of VS Code, you can turn this on with the github.experimental.multipleAccounts setting. Here are a couple of scenarios in which you might need multiple accounts: Use Account1 for Settings Sync and Account2 for the GitHub Pull Request extension Use Account1 for the GitHub extension (to push) and Account2 for GitHub Copilot To use this functionality, simply trigger a log in action (either with a built-in feature like Settings Sync or with an extension), and you'll be given the option to log in to a different account. This feature also pairs nicely with the new Account Preference Quick Pick should you need to change the account at a later stage. While most things should just continue to work with your existing extensions, some behaviors might not play perfectly nice with this multi-account world just yet. If you think there's room for improvement, do open an issue on those extensions. With the help of the relatively new vscode.authentication.getAccounts('github') API, extensions have a lot of power to handle multiple accounts. Next iteration, we are planning on turning this feature on by default for all users. MSAL-based Microsoft Authentication We have been moving towards having our Microsoft Authentication stack use MSAL (Microsoft Authentication Library) . It's been a huge undertaking, but we have made great progress in this iteration. This work spans all VS Code clients, so that includes VS Code and VS Code for the Web . For vscode.dev, we have enabled the browser-based MSAL.js for all Microsoft authentication requests. In other words, vscode.dev is now entirely on MSAL. For VS Code, the desktop client, we have this feature behind a setting, microsoft.useMsal . It's behind a setting for now, as we plan on moving towards the broker flow , which would enable VS Code to use the authentication state of the operating system. So, to prevent as little interruption as possible, we will do that work first before enabling this widely. That said, if you're eager to try this new authentication, you are welcome to try and provide us feedback. You can see the detailed status of this transition to MSAL across all of VS Code in Issue #178740 . TypeScript 5.7 This release includes initial support for the upcoming TypeScript 5.7 release. Check out the TypeScript 5.7 plan for details. To start using preview builds of TypeScript 5.7, install the TypeScript Nightly extension . Proposed APIs Tools for language models We continue to iterate on our LanguageModelTool API. The API comes with two major parts: The ability for extensions to register a tool . A tool is a piece of functionality that is meant to be used by language models. For example, reading the Git history of a file. The mechanics for language models to support tools, such as extensions passing tools when making a request, language models requesting a tool invocation, and extensions communicating back the result of a tool invocation. In this milestone, we added the ability for tools to request user confirmation before running. This is helpful for tools that may have some side-effect. Take a look at issue #213274 for more details or to give us feedback. Note : The API is still under active development, and things will change. Engineering ESM is shipping for VS Code We are finally shipping our ESM work in VS Code Stable releases. That means that all layers of VS Code core (electron, node.js, browser, workers) use the import and export syntax in JavaScript for module loading and exporting. All usages of our legacy AMD loader are disabled and will be removed as part of our debt week in October. The move to ESM massively improves startup performance. For one, a lot of AMD overhead is removed, but then the main workbench bundle size is also reduced by more than 10%: Now that we are fully converted to ESM, we plan to improve our engineering system for VS Code. With ESM, a lot of modern tooling will work for us and we are very excited to share more details about this in the near future. Note : extensions are not impacted by this change and not loaded via ESM, please see https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/130367 for details. Use NPM as default package manager Beginning of September 2024, we have completed the switch from yarn to npm for package management in the microsoft/vscode repo. This decision was based on the specific requirements of VS Code and center around these criteria: Performance: we initially moved to yarn because of performance reasons and npm can now also meet our requirements Security: we make our supply chain more secure by limiting exposure and reducing the number of tools we depend upon Notable fixes 226401 fileWatcher keeps consuming CPU at 200%+ 10054 [WSL]: Ports tab incorrectly reports Ports in WSL being forwarded to local when localhostForwarding = false Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @RedCMD (RedCMD) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @BABA983 (BABA) fix terminal tab selection not work properly PR #224394 Register fold import action PR #227216 @BlackHole1 (Kevin Cui) : ci: ensure retry logic consistency PR #226038 @Cecil0o0 (hj) : chore: rm unreached ignore items when build extensions. PR #227906 @dangerman (Anees Ahee) : Fix Image Preview transparency grid scaling PR #226505 @g-cappai (Gianluca Cappai) : Fix open html anchor link in markdown preview PR #228633 @gabritto (Gabriela Araujo Britto) : [typescript-language-features] Expandable hover PR #228255 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) Add actions to preview editor tab's hover PR #226023 Fix typo in workspace extension activation failure message PR #227348 Correct tooltip capitalization of debug panel in status bar (fix #228088) PR #228089 @henricryden : additional search path for libc.so.6 in check-requirements-linux.sh PR #227713 @janssen-tiobe (janssen) : Fix: agressive URI encoding in table view of the problems panel PR #224841 @jeanp413 (Jean Pierre) : Fix initial terminal dimensions are reload are incorrect PR #225554 @jjaeggli (Jacob Jaeggli) : Document focus suggest details with ctrl+alt+space PR #190096 @juliapz (Julia Pozdeeva) : Prevent find widget from being cropped in AUX window PR #229001 @marrej (Marcus Revaj) : # Render file creation in the refactor preview PR #226950 @nojaf (Florian Verdonck) Use Worker to serialize Notebook PR #226632 Include id in ErrorNoTelemetry message PR #226715 @PhantomPower82 : Polish getting started page (fix #226991) PR #226994 @rafamerlin (Rafael Merlin) : Make Inlay hint length configurable PR #221276 @rehmsen (Ole) Initialize test variables in setup to avoid order dependency. PR #226596 Support multiple comment widgets per notebook cell. PR #226770 @remcohaszing (Remco Haszing) : Add test-results.xml to .gitignore PR #214238 @repraze (Thomas Dubosc) : fix: swap end for flex-end in browser/hover.css PR #224102 @segevfiner (Segev Finer) : Adopt ext host restart for custom text editors PR #225985 @SimonSiefke (Simon Siefke) : fix: memory leak in debug view PR #225334 @sunnylost (sunnylost) : extensions: wrap table cell content in paragraph element PR #228365 @tisilent (xiejialong) : Add editor gpu rendering fallback PR #228414 @tmm1 (Aman Karmani) : Ignore tsserver requests for createDirectoryWatcher(~/Library) on macOS PR #227653 Contributions to vscode-docs : @0dinD (Odin Dahlström) : Update supported Java versions PR #7561 @alexwkleung (Alex Leung) : Update enter jupyter server url screenshot PR #7584 @DiskCrasher (Mike) : Fixed missing "!" in code PR #7595 @gaganshera (Gaganjot Singh) : Update prompt-crafting.md PR #7555 @harish-s-developer (Harish Srinivasan) : Added new Managing dependencies section, fixed one typo PR #7617 @harrydowning (Harry Downing) : Remove incorrect statement about pre release tags PR #7593 @listsarah (Sarah Listzwan) : To Close Issue #7536: Update "Embedded Programming Languages" PR #7539 @mistymadonna (Misty Hays) : Updated Azure Extensions homepage, Created new Getting Started page PR #7520 @muzimuzhi (Yukai Chou) : Typo, add missing inline code markup PR #7589 @partev : fix a URL redirect PR #7608 @Sarke (Peter Stalman) : Another Flatpak/KDE5 wallet workaround PR #7606 @seaniyer (Sean) : Update publishing-extension.md PR #7540 @vinistock (Vinicius Stock) : Update Ruby links to point to new documentation PR #7607 @wjandrea (William Andrea) tasks.md: add source property to problemMatcher PR #7493 tasks.md: mention problemMatcher.severity PR #7494 Contributions to vscode-extension-samples : @liu3hao (Weihao) : Add missing activation event PR #1057 Contributions to vscode-js-debug : @lucacasonato (Luca Casonato) : fix: don't inject NODE_OPTIONS in Deno PR #2080 Contributions to vscode-jupyter : @rchiodo (Rich Chiodo) : Make display_name changes also cause a kernel change event PR #15967 Contributions to vscode-languageserver-node : @StellaHuang95 (Stella) : Support llmGenerated property on CodeAction PR #1557 Contributions to vscode-pull-request-github : @ixzhao : fix quote reply PR #6230 Contributions to vscode-python-debugger : @rchiodo (Rich Chiodo) : Update debugpy info to latest shipped version PR #462 Contributions to vscode-vsce : @mlasson (Marc Lasson) : Fix typo in option hint PR #1046 Contributions to vscode-wasm : @mlugg (Matthew Lugg) : Fix stream bugs PR #196 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @aschaber1 (Alexander Schaber) : chore: fix typo from kubernets to kubernetes PR #2013 @dawedawe (dawe) : fix typo in the documentation of CompletionParams PR #2019 @didrikmunther (Didrik Munther) : Fix misspelling in pullDiagnostics.md PR #2022 @InSyncWithFoo (InSync) Fix a few typos in percentage 's doc comments PR #2010 Add Taplo to implementor list PR #2021 @SamB (Samuel Bronson) : Update servers.md: vscode-markdown-languageserver moved PR #2012 @sh-cho (Seonghyeon Cho) : Add fluent-bit language server implementation PR #2016 @StellaHuang95 (Stella) : Support llmGenerated property on CodeAction PR #2020 On this page there are 17 sections On this page GitHub Copilot Accessibility Workbench Editor Source Control Notebooks Debug Languages Remote Development Contributions to extensions Extension Authoring Debug Adapter Protocol Preview Features Proposed APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_104 | August 2025 (version 1.104) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 August 2025 (version 1.104) Release date: September 11, 2025 Update 1.104.1 : The update addresses these issues . Update 1.104.2 : The update addresses these issues . Update 1.104.3 : The update addresses these issues . Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the August 2025 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Model flexibility Let VS Code select the best model (Show more) Contribute models through VS Code extensions (Show more) Security Confirm edits for sensitive files (Show more) Let agents run terminal commands safely (Show more) Productivity Remove distractions from chat file edits (Show more) Use AGENTS.md to add chat context (Show more) If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Download Insiders In this update Chat MCP Accessibility Code Editing Editor Experience Notebooks Source Control Terminal Languages Contributions to extensions Extension Authoring Proposed APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Navigation End --> Chat Auto model selection (Preview) This iteration, we're introducing auto model selection in chat. When you choose the Auto model in the model picker, VS Code automatically selects a model to ensure that you get the optimal performance and reduce rate limits. Auto model selection is currently in preview and we are rolling it out to all GitHub Copilot users in VS Code in the following weeks, starting with the individual Copilot plans. Auto will choose between Claude Sonnet 4, GPT-5, GPT-5 mini, and GPT-4.1, unless your organization has disabled access to these models. When using auto model selection, VS Code uses a variable model multiplier, based on the selected model. If you are a paid user, auto will apply a 10% request discount. You can view the selected model and the model multiplier by hovering over the response in the Chat view. Learn more about auto model selection in VS Code . Confirm edits to sensitive files Setting : chat.tools.edits.autoApprove In agent mode, the agent can autonomously make edits to files in your workspace. This might include accidentally or maliciously modifying or deleting important files such as configuration files, which could cause immediate negative side-effects on your machine. Learn more about security considerations when using AI-powered development tools . In this release, the agent now explicitly asks for user confirmation before making edits to certain files. This provides an additional layer of safety when using agent mode. With the chat.tools.edits.autoApprove setting, you can configure file patterns to indicate which files require confirmation. Common system folders, dotfiles, and files outside your workspace will require confirmation by default. Support for AGENTS.md files (Experimental) Setting : chat.useAgentsMdFile An AGENTS.md file lets you provide context and instructions to the agent. Starting from this release, when you have an AGENTS.md file in your workspace root(s), it is automatically picked up as context for chat requests. This can be useful for teams that use multiple AI agents. Support for AGENTS.md files is enabled by default and can be controlled with the chat.useAgentsMdFile setting. See https://agents.md/ for more information about AGENTS.md files. Learn more about customizing chat in VS Code to your practices and team workflows. Improved changed files experience This iteration, the changed files list has been reworked with several quality-of-life features. These changes should improve your experience when working in agent mode! The list of changed files is now collapsed by default to give more space to the chat conversation. While collapsed, you can still see the files changed count and the lines added or removed. When you keep or accept a suggested change, the file is removed from the files changed list. When you stage or commit a file using the Source Control view, this automatically accepts the proposed file changes. Changes per file (lines added or removed) are now shown for each item in the list. Use custom chat modes in prompt files Prompt files are Markdown files in which you write reusable chat prompts. To run a prompt file, type / followed by the prompt file name in the chat input field, or use the Play button when you have the prompt file open in the editor. You can specify which chat mode should be used for running the prompt file. Previously, you could only use built-in chat modes like agent , edit , or ask in your prompt files. Now, you can also reference custom chat modes in your prompt files. Learn more about customizing chat in VS Code with prompt files, chat modes, and custom instructions. Configure prompt file suggestions (Experimental) Setting : chat.promptFilesRecommendations Teams often create custom prompt files to standardize AI workflows, but these prompts can be hard to discover when users need them most. You can now configure which prompt files appear as suggestions in the Chat welcome view based on contextual conditions. The new chat.promptFilesRecommendations setting supports both simple boolean values and when-clause expressions for context-aware suggestions. { "chat.promptFilesRecommendations" : { "plan" : true , // Always suggest "a11y-audit" : "resourceExtname == .html" , // Only for HTML files "document" : "resourceLangId == markdown" , // Only for Markdown files "debug" : false // Never suggest } } This helps teams surface the right AI workflows at the right time, making custom prompts more discoverable and relevant to your workspace and file type. Select tools in tool sets Tool sets are a convenient way to group related tools together and VS Code has several built-in tool sets like edit or search . The tools picker now shows which tools are part of each tool set and you can individually enable or disable each tool. You can access the tools picker via the Configure Tools... button in the Chat view. Configure font used in chat Settings : chat.fontFamily , chat.fontSize VS Code lets you choose which font to use across the editor, however the Chat view lacked that configurability. We have now added two new settings for configuring the font family ( chat.fontFamily ) and font size ( chat.fontSize ) of chat messages. Note : content for lists currently does not yet honor these settings, but this is something that we are working on fixing in the upcoming releases. Collaborate with coding agents (Experimental) With coding agents, you delegate tasks to AI agents to be worked on in the background. You can have multiple such agents work in parallel. We're continuing to evolve the chat sessions experience to help you collaborate more effectively with coding agents. Chat Sessions view Setting : chat.agentSessionsViewLocation The Chat Sessions view provides a single, unified view for managing both local and contributed chat sessions. We've significantly enhanced the Chat Sessions view where you can now perform all key operations, making it easier to iterate and finalize your coding tasks. Status Bar tracking : Monitor progress across multiple coding agents directly from the Status Bar. Multi-session support : Launch and manage multiple chat sessions from the same view. Expanded context menus : Access more actions to interact with your coding agents efficiently. Rich descriptions : With rich description enabled, each list entry now includes detailed context to help you quickly find relevant information. GitHub coding agent integration We've improved the integration of GitHub coding agents with chat sessions to deliver a smoother, more intuitive experience. Chat editor actions : Easily view or apply code changes, and check out pull requests directly from the chat editor. Seamless transitions : Move from local chats to GitHub agent tasks with improved continuity. Better session rendering : Various improvements on cards and tools rendering for better visual clarity. Performance boosts : Faster session loading for a more responsive experience. Delegate to coding agent We continued to expand on ways to delegate local tasks in VS Code to a Copilot coding agent: Fix todos with coding agent: Comments starting with TODO now show a Code Action to quickly initiate a coding agent session. Delegate from chat ( githubPullRequests.codingAgent.uiIntegration ): Additional context, including file references, are now forwarded to GitHub coding agent when you perform the Delegate to coding agent action in chat. This enables you to precisely plan out a task before handing it off to coding agent to complete it. A new chat editor is opened with the coding agent's progress shown in real-time. Theme: Sharp Solarized (preview on vscode.dev ) Social sign in with Google The option to sign in or sign up to GitHub Copilot with a Google account is now generally available and rolling out to all users in VS Code. You can find more information about this in the announcement GitHub blog post . Terminal auto approve Setting : chat.tools.terminal.enableAutoApprove Automatically approving terminal commands can greatly streamline agent interactions, but it also comes with security risks . This release introduces several improvements to terminal auto approve to enhance both usability and security. You can now enable or disable terminal auto approve with the chat.tools.terminal.enableAutoApprove setting. This setting can also be set by organizations via device management . Before terminal auto approve is actually enabled, you need to explicitly opt in via a dropdown in the Chat view. From the Chat view, you can conveniently add auto-approve rules for the command being run, or open the configuration setting: Theme: Sapphire (preview on vscode.dev ) This has some basic support for commands to suggest sub-commands where they would be more appropriate, such as suggesting an npm test rule rather than npm . To improve transparency around auto-approved commands, we show which rule was applied in the Chat view, also enabling you to configure that rule: We improved the defaults to provide safety and reduce noise. You can see the full list of rules by viewing the setting's default value by opening your settings.json file, then entering chat.tools.terminal.autoApprove and completing it via Tab . Non-regex rules that contain a backslash or forward slash character are now treated as a path and not only approve that exact path, but also allow either slash type and also a ./ prefix. When using PowerShell, all rules are forced to be case insensitive. When agent mode wants to pull content from the internet using curl , wget , Invoke-RestMethod , or Invoke-WebRequest , we now show a warning, as this is a common vector for prompt injection attacks. Learn more about terminal auto approve in our documentation. Global auto approve Global auto approve has been an experimental setting since v1.99 . What we have observed is that users have been enabling this setting without thinking deeply enough about the consequences. Additionally, some users thought that enabling the chat.tools.autoApprove setting was a prerequisite to enabling terminal auto approve, which was never the case. To combat these misconceptions and to further protect our users, there is now a deservedly scary-looking warning the first time global auto approve attempts to be used, so the user can easily back out and disable the setting: The setting has also been changed to the clearer chat.tools.global.autoApprove without any automatic migration, so all users (accidental or intentional) need to go and explicitly set it again. Math rendering enabled by default Setting : chat.math.enabled Rendering of mathematical equations in chat responses is now generally available and enabled by default. You can disable this functionality with the chat.math.enabled setting. This feature is powered by KaTeX and supports both inline and block math equations. Inline math equations can be written by wrapping the markup in single dollar signs ( $...$ ), while block math equations use two dollar signs ( $$...$$ ). Chat view default visibility Setting : workbench.secondarySideBar.defaultVisibility When you first open a workspace, the Secondary Side Bar with the Chat view is visible by default, inviting you to ask questions or start an agentic session right away. You can configure this behavior with the workbench.secondarySideBar.defaultVisibility setting or by using the dropdown of the Chat view itself: Improved task support Input request detection When you run a task or terminal command in agent mode, the agent now detects when the process requests user input, and you're prompted to respond in chat. If you type in the terminal while a prompt is present, the prompt will hide automatically. When options and descriptions are provided (such as [Y] Yes [N] No ), these are surfaced in the confirmation prompt. Error detection for tasks with problem matchers For tasks that use problem matchers, the agent now collects and surfaces errors based on the problem matcher results, rather than relying on the language model to evaluate output. Problems are presented in a dropdown within the chat progress message, allowing you to navigate directly to the problem location. This ensures that errors are reported only when relevant to the current task execution. Compound task support Agent mode now supports running compound tasks. When you run a compound task, the agent indicates progress and output for each dependent task, including any prompts for user input. This enables more complex workflows and better visibility into multi-step task execution. In the example below, the VS Code - Build task is run. Output is assessed for each dependency task and a problem is surfaced to the user in the response and in the progress message dropdown. Improved terminal support Moved more terminal tools to core Like the runInTerminal tool last release , the terminalSelection and terminalLastCommand tools have been moved from the extension to core, which should provide general reliability improvements. Configurable terminal tool shell integration timeout Whenever the runInTerminal tool tries to create a terminal, it waits a period for shell integration to activate. If your shell is especially slow to start up, say you have a very heavy PowerShell profile, this could cause it to wait the previously fixed 5-second timeout and still end up failing in the end. This timeout is now configurable via the chat.tools.terminal.shellIntegrationTimeout setting. Prevent Command Prompt usage Since shell integration isn't really possible in Command Prompt, at least with the capabilities that Copilot needs, Copilot now opts to use Windows PowerShell instead, which should have shell integration by default. This should improve the reliability of the runInTerminal tool when your default shell is Command Prompt. If, for some reason, you want Copilot to use Command Prompt, this is currently not possible. We will likely be adding the ability to customize the terminal profile used by Copilot soon, which is tracked in #253945 . Todo List tool The todo list tool helps agents break down complex multi-step tasks into smaller tasks and report progress to help you track individual items. We've made improvements to this tool, which is now enabled by default. Tool progress is displayed in the Todo control at the top of the Chat view, which automatically collapses as the todo list is worked through and shows only the current task in progress. Skip tool calls When the agent requests confirmation for a tool call, you can now choose to skip the tool call and let the agent continue. You can still cancel the request or enter a new request via the chat input box. Improvements to semantic workspace search We've upgraded the #codebase tool to use a new embeddings model for semantic searching for code in your workspace. This new model provides better results for code searches. The new embeddings also use less storage space, requiring only 6% of our previous model's on-disk storage size for each embedding. We'll be gradually rolling out this new embeddings model over the next few weeks. Your workspace will be automatically updated to use this new embeddings model, so no action is required. VS Code Insiders is already using the new model if you want to try it out before it rolls out to you. Hide and disable GitHub Copilot AI features Setting : chat.disableAIFeatures We are introducing a new setting chat.disableAIFeatures for disabling and hiding built-in AI features provided by GitHub Copilot, including chat, code completions, and next edit suggestions. The setting has the following advantages over the previous solution we had in place: Syncs across your devices unless you disable this explicitly Disables the Copilot extensions in case they are installed Configure the setting per-profile or per-workspace, making it easy to disable AI features selectively The command to "Hide AI Features" was renamed to reflect this change and will now reveal this new setting in the settings editor. Note : users that were hiding AI features previously will continue to see AI features hidden. You can update the setting in addition if you want to synchronize your choice across devices. MCP Support for server instructions VS Code now reads MCP server instructions and will include them in its base prompt. MCP auto discovery disabled by default Setting : chat.mcp.discovery.enabled VS Code supports automatic discovery of MCP servers installed in other apps like Claude Code. As MCP support has matured in VS Code, auto-discovery is now disabled by default, but you can re-enable it using the chat.mcp.discovery.enabled setting. Enable MCP Setting : chat.mcp.access The chat.mcp.enabled setting that previously controlled whether MCP servers could run in VS Code has been migrated to a new chat.mcp.access setting with more descriptive options: all : allow all MCP servers to run (equivalent to the previous true value) none : disable MCP support entirely (equivalent to the previous false value) Accessibility Focus chat confirmation action We've added a command, Focus Chat Confirmation (kb(workbench.action.chat.focusConfirmation)) , which focuses the confirmation dialog, if present, or announces to screen reader users that confirmation is not required. Code Editing Configurable inline suggestion delay Setting : editor.inlineSuggest.minShowDelay A new setting editor.inlineSuggest.minShowDelay enables you to configure how quickly inline suggestions can appear after you type. This can be useful if you find that suggestions are appearing too quickly and getting in the way of your typing. Editor Experience Window border color support on Windows Setting : window.border We are happy to add a new setting window.border on Windows that enables you to show a colored border around the VS Code window. The setting has the following options: default : respect color theme settings, fallback to Windows settings system : respect Windows settings only (window title accent color) off : disable border colors <color> : specific color in Hex, RGB, RGBA, HSL, HSLA format You can configure colors per workspace, making it easier to distinguish which workspace is opened in which window. When you configure window.border as default , a theme is able to set the border color for active and inactive windows using the window.activeBorder and window.inactiveBorder color keys. You can further override these colors from the workbench.colorCustomizations setting. Manage extension account preference We've added an Accounts: Manage Extension Account Preferences command to the Command Palette. When invoked, it shows a list of extensions that have access to authentication accounts and lets you change the account that those extensions use. You are even able to sign in to a new account right from the list. This builds on the account management functionality that we added a year ago . Editor tab index Setting : workbench.editor.showTabIndex You can now render the index of an editor tab in the tab's label. This can be helpful when you have many tabs open and want to quickly navigate between them using keyboard shortcuts. Enable this functionality with the workbench.editor.showTabIndex setting. Editor tab bar scrollbar visibility Setting : workbench.editor.titleScrollbarVisibility The workbench.editor.titleScrollbarVisibility enables you to control when the scrollbar in the editor tab bar is visible. The default value auto shows the scrollbar only when the tabs overflow and a tab is hovered. You can also set it to visible to always show the scrollbar when the tabs overflow, or hidden to never show it. Issue reporter improvements When reporting issues in VS Code or extensions via the built-in issue reporter, you can now choose either Create on GitHub or Preview on GitHub via a dropdown on the report button. If the button does not populate a dropdown and only shows Create or Preview, this likely means that you are still loading extension data or need to ensure that you are signed in with a GitHub account that provides the correct scopes. Notebooks Improved NES suggestions (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.notebook.enhancedNextEditSuggestions.enabled We are experimenting with improving the quality of next edit suggestions for notebooks. Currently, the language model has access to the contents of the active cell when generating suggestions. With the github.copilot.chat.notebook.enhancedNextEditSuggestions.enabled setting enabled, the language model has access to the entire notebook, enabling it to generate more accurate and higher-quality next edit suggestions. Source Control Preview and migrate Git worktree changes You can now preview differences between worktree files and your current workspace by right-clicking on a worktree file to open the context menu in the Source Control Changes view and selecting Compare with Workspace . After reviewing your changes, you can use the Migrate Worktree Changes... command from the Command Palette ( ) to merge all changes from a worktree into your current workspace. This makes it easy to work across multiple worktrees and selectively bring changes back into your main repository. Learn more about Git worktrees in VS Code . Terminal Terminal window discoverability and polish A common request is to allow terminals to be opened in separate windows. This functionality has existed for about one and a half years, but it has not been particularly discoverable. This iteration, we added multiple entry points for this functionality: The new command ⌃⇧⌥` (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+Alt+` ) . The empty editor and tab well menus now have a New Terminal entry. The new terminal dropdown has been shuffled around and now has a New Terminal Window entry. The top-level terminal menu now has a New Terminal Window entry. We also polished the experience where these new terminal windows open in compact mode. If you add a new tab to the window, it automatically exits compact mode. Terminal actions in terminal editors The actions that are available in the terminal view (new terminal dropdown, clear terminal, etc.) are now also available for terminals in the editor area and terminal windows. Just like in the terminal view, you can right-click the actions area to move them out of the overflow menu. Terminal IntelliSense improvements (Preview) Terminal IntelliSense is getting several improvements this release: Multiple performance improvements, these disproportionately affect the experience on Windows. git completions are now more reliable on Windows due to the removal of the sed dependency, which isn't available on Windows. git completions now have familiar icons to represent commits, branches, remotes, stashes, and tags. A large number of completion specs were added: adb , basename , bundle , clear , cut , date , dd , diff , dig , dirname , docker-compose , docker , dotnet , env , export , fdisk , fmt , fold , gh , go , htop , id , jq , ln , lsblk , lsof , mount , nl , od , paste , ping , pkill , readlink , rsync , ruby , ruff , sed , seq , shred , sort , source , split , stat , su , sudo , tac , tar , tee , time , tr , traceroute , tree , truncate , uniq , unzip , wc , where , whereis , which , who , xargs , xxd , yo , zip Terminal sticky scroll improvements We have now enabled terminal sticky scroll by default. We have made several improvements for a better experience, such as improved behavior when using a pager. Terminal sticky scroll is now compatible with the editor.tabFocusMode setting. Languages JavaScript and TypeScript After reviewing usage numbers, we decided to remove our built-in bower.json IntelliSense. Bower has been deprecated since 2017 and our built-in support had little usage and was not being actively maintained. Bower recommends that users migrate to npm or yarn . Continued support for Bower in VS Code can be provided by extensions. Python Python Environments extension support for Pipenv Pipenv environments can now be discovered and selected just like in the Python extension. In addition, they appear in the Environment Manager view in the Python sidebar, where they are grouped and displayed alongside your other environment types. Configure environment variable injection A new setting, python.useEnvFile , controls whether environment variables from .env files and the python.envFile setting are injected into terminals when the Python Environments extension is enabled. Python Environments extension improvements The Python Environments Extension continued to receive bug fixes and improvements as part of the controlled roll-out to stable users. To use the Python Environments extension during the roll-out, make sure the extension is installed and add the following to your VS Code settings.json file: "python.useEnvironmentsExtension": true . AI-powered hover summaries with Pylance (Experimental) A new experimental AI hover summaries feature is now available for Python when using the latest pre-release version of Pylance. When you enable the python.analysis.aiHoverSummaries setting, you can get helpful summaries on-the-fly for symbols that do not already have documentation. This makes it easier to understand unfamiliar code and boosts productivity as you explore Python projects. AI hover summaries are currently available to GitHub Copilot Pro, Pro+, and Enterprise users. We look forward to bringing this experimental experience to the stable extension version soon. Run code snippet tool Instead of relying on terminal commands like python -c "code" or creating temporary files to be executed, the Pylance run code snippets tool enables GitHub Copilot to execute Python snippets entirely in memory. It automatically uses the correct Python interpreter configured for your workspace, and it eliminates common issues with shell escaping and quoting that sometimes arise during terminal execution. One of the standout benefits is the clean, well-formatted output it provides, with both stdout and stderr interleaved for clarity. This makes it ideal when using agent mode with GitHub Copilot to test small blocks of code, run quick scripts, validate Python expressions, or check imports, all within the context of your workspace. To try it out, make sure to use the latest pre-release version of the Pylance extension. You can then select the pylancerunCodeSnippet tool via the Add context... > Tools menu in the Chat view. Note : As with all AI-generated code, please make sure to inspect the generated code before allowing this tool to be executed. Reviewing the logic and intent of the code ensures it aligns with your project's goals and maintains safety and correctness. Pylance IntelliSense enabled in all Python documents The python.analysis.supportAllPythonDocuments setting has been removed from the latest Pylance pre-release version, with Pylance IntelliSense now being enabled by default in all Python documents, including terminal and diff views. This means you can get rich code completions, hover and code navigation wherever you work with Python in VS Code. Activation hooks Python activation hooks can now run from shell integration scripts, instead of requiring the Python environment extension to modify your shell profile. This provides more reliable terminal activation when python-envs.terminal.autoActivationType is set to shellStartup and, importantly, ensures Copilot terminals are activated as expected. Contributions to extensions GitHub Pull Requests There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests extension, which enables you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. New features include: Side Bar content collapses on narrow windows Pull request and issue webviews restore after reload The new "TODO" code action lets you delegate directly to the Copilot coding agent Submodules can be ignored with githubPullRequests.ignoreSubmodules Review the changelog for the 0.118.0 release of the extension to learn about everything in the release. Extension Authoring shellIntegrationNonce for extension launched terminals shellIntegrationNonce can now be passed to createTerminal in TerminalOptions and ExtensionTerminalOptions . This enables the extension to control the nonce, which is used to verify commands in shell integration escape sequences . Language Model Chat Provider API This iteration, we finalized the LanguageModelChatProviders API. This enables extensions to contribute one or more language models, cloud-hosted or local. By installing the extension, users can select these models through the model picker in chat. There are already multiple extensions that take advantage of this API to extend chat in VS Code with additional models, including AI Toolkit for VS Code , Cerebras Inference , and Hugging Face . You can learn more about how to utilize this API in our Language Model Chat Provider extension guide or in our extension sample . Note : Models provided through this API are currently only available to users on individual GitHub Copilot plans . Proposed APIs Authentication: Supporting WWW-Authenticate challenges in getSession A well-established pattern of HTTP is that a request to an API can return a 401 Unauthorized status code with a WWW-Authenticate header, which defines auth challenges . These are essentially things that the API needs in order to resolve past the 401. We have introduced a proposed API, which allows for the passing down and handling of these challenges to authentication providers. First off, from the calling side you can now pass in a challenge like so: export interface AuthenticationWWWAuthenticateRequest { /** * The raw WWW-Authenticate header value that triggered this challenge. */ readonly wwwAuthenticate : string ; /** * Optional scopes for the session. */ readonly scopes ?: readonly string []; } export namespace authentication { // NOTE: The only change is the 2nd parameter, the other variations of `getSession` have the same change export function getSession ( providerId : string , scopeListOrRequest : ReadonlyArray < string > | AuthenticationWWWAuthenticateRequest , options ?: AuthenticationGetSessionOptions ): Thenable < AuthenticationSession | undefined >; } On the authentication provider side, we have added the following two new functions to AuthenticationProvider : getSessionsFromChallenges ( constraint : AuthenticationConstraint , options : AuthenticationProviderSessionOptions ): Thenable < readonly AuthenticationSession []>; createSessionFromChallenges ( constraint : AuthenticationConstraint , options : AuthenticationProviderSessionOptions ): Thenable < AuthenticationSession >; and an auth provider can declare support for challenges when registered via supportsChallenges: true in AuthenticationProviderOptions . Example: Azure MFA This work was initially done due to an upcoming change to require MFA in Azure APIs so let's also use that as an example of this API. Let's say you have an extension that creates a resource in Azure. All that's doing is calling an Azure RM API, nothing fancy... Your extension is probably already familiar with calling vscode.authentication.getSession to get an authentication session, mainly an access token, that can be used to call this API. Now, when you first minted that authentication session, depending on your organization, you may or may NOT have gone through multifactor authentication (MFA). If you did, then the Azure API will be happy. If you didn't go through MFA, then Azure's API will return a 401 and a WWW-Authenticate header. Now comes our new API in VS Code... all you have to do is take that header value, and pass it right in to vscode.authentication.getSession : const newRequest = { wwwAuthenticate: theRawHeaderValue , scopes: scopesFromPreviousRequest }; const sessionWithMFA = await vscode . authentication . getSession ( 'microsoft' , newRequest , options ); This will pass that header value down to the microsoft auth provider, and the auth provider will be responsible for minting a session in which the challenges are satisfied. Next steps Next iteration we will finalize the getSession (aka extension asking for auth) parts of this proposal so if you have any feedback on that or the shape of the AuthenticationProvider changes, let us know! You can find the full proposal on GitHub here . Another use case that will be lit up soon regarding WWW-Authenticate , is for MCP servers to issue a WWW-Authenticate header asking for a token with more scopes. There's a proposal in the MCP specification for this . View containers in the Secondary Side Bar Extensions can contribute view containers to the activitybar and panel . We have now added support for contributing to the secondarySidebar as well. This is currently behind the contribSecondarySideBar proposed API. We are hoping to finalize this API soon. Engineering Exploring Playwright and Playwright MCP in the inner development loop of VS Code Agent mode and other AI features of VS Code have become a core tool (no pun intended) for the VS Code team to build VS Code itself. We wanted to explore how we can apply these features further to make the inner development loop of VS Code even better. To that end, we have been experimenting with extending our existing smoke test automation project , which uses Playwright , to create an MCP server that can drive a local instance of VS Code. This allows our existing agentic flows, which focused on receiving context from build/test-time artifacts (compilation, linters, tests, etc.), to now also interact with a live instance of VS Code... verifying that changes have the desired effect at runtime. The first piece of this work can be found in the test/mcp folder of the vscode repo. If you're interested in trying it out, it's very easy to get started: Follow the Contribution Guidelines for getting a local version of Code OSS running Then you can use our trivial (for now) prompt file to ask a question /playwright your question here in Agent mode. This is still an early exploration, but we are excited about the possibilities this opens up for us to use AI further in our inner development loop. The ground work is now laid, and we will be iterating on this to make it more robust and useful for the team. This work was recently featured on the VS Code Insiders podcast, where we discussed the motivations behind this exploration and some of the technical details. You can listen to the episode of the VS Code Insiders podcast . Notable fixes vscode#151902 - Terminal: Copy on selection + new highlight in 1.68 copies previous term on CMD+F vscode#222075 - Terminal sticky scroll can show up for 1 frame when using page down in a pager xtermjs/xterm.js#5390 - Fix scrollbar teleport after exiting alt buffer Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @RedCMD (RedCMD) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @albertosantini (Alberto Santini) Pull Requests Contributions to vscode : @a-ariff (Ariff) : docs: fix grammar in Development Container section PR #264162 @alexkozy (Alexey) fix: tiny memory leak in debugToolBar.ts PR #259349 fix: register WorkerTextModelSyncClient PR #259442 @alexvoedi (Alexander Vödisch) : Fix linkedEditing desync PR #242993 @bluedog13 Fix OAuth redirect URI format to align with Microsoft's URL standards PR #260446 Fix OAuth2 resource parameter compliance with RFC 8707 PR #261815 @CGNonofr (Loïc Mangeonjean) : Fix theme not being synchronized with external windows on firefox PR #259839 @Da-nie-elT : Update for-in loop snippet with Object.hasOwn() PR #262682 @DoctorKrolic : Add .slnx to xml language extension list PR #259049 @DrSergei (Druzhkov Sergei) : Fix memory reference handling in Watch window PR #259753 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) Add Go to Test to coverage sources quickpick PR #259600 Set correct active entry on test coverage toolbar's quickpick PR #259639 Test Results: Only offer Go to Test with a uri (fix #260443) PR #260508 @hihry (Himanshu Ravindra Iwanati) : fix: update capitalization for 'Restore to Last Checkpoint' hover text PR #259572 @j3iiifn : Prompt file name cannot contain digits PR #261704 @joelverhagen (Joel Verhagen) Allow the canonical package name and version to be sent back from the install flow PR #259081 Support server.json being returned by assisted MCP install PR #259634 Add support for a help link when MCP assisted installation fails PR #260215 @kenherring (Ken Herring) : terminal.copyOnSelection and terminalFindWidget - do not copy selection on focus PR #254065 @kplates (kplates) : feat: Include/ Exclude file types from file search PR #254285 @LeftPhalange (Ethan Bovard) : Add Open Active Diff Side option to Command Palette using DIFF_OPEN_SIDE command PR #261699 @remcohaszing (Remco Haszing) Fix global access of MonacoEnvironment PR #248075 Highlight more languages in markdown code blocks PR #263550 @rwoll (Ross Wollman) Wait for agent loop to finish in automation PR #262370 support model switching in automation PR #262420 fix: parse commands in chat.open commands PR #263458 workbench.action.chat.export optionally accept path PR #263507 fix: confirm response based on promise PR #263894 Revert "fix: confirm response based on promise (#_263894)" PR #264047 @SimonSiefke (Simon Siefke) fix: memory leak in pattern input widget PR #258152 fix: memory leak in codelens controller PR #263136 fix: memory leak in accessibility signal scheduler PR #263147 fix: memory leak in QuickDiffModel PR #265007 @swordjjjkkk (Truman) : Display Tab Indexes in VSCode PR #209196 @terreng (Terren) : Implement new option to control title scrollbar visibility PR #246161 @timheuer (Tim Heuer) : Add collapse all functionality to test coverage view PR #258906 @tmm1 (Aman Karmani) fix some typos PR #259747 terminalProcessManager: fix disposable leak PR #261710 storage: optimize sqlite insert with upsert syntax PR #261999 @Tritlo (Matthías Páll Gissurarson) : extHostMcp: accept Content-Type parameters for SSE/JSON handling PR #262787 @ttttotem (ttttotem) : Fixes "Caret jumps to column 0 when clicking between first two characters" PR #265131 @JBlitzar (JBlitzar) : Use app.dock.hide when connecting to an existing instance PR #259352 Contributions to vscode-copilot-chat : @24anisha : add sku data to github telemetry PR #819 @devm33 (Devraj Mehta) : Make logprobs field optional PR #325 @iann0036 (Ian Mckay) : fix: Case sensitive adjustment for "GitHub" PR #631 @joelverhagen (Joel Verhagen) Use .NET SDK to search for NuGet packages, emit events, add tests for all package types PR #546 Add command executor abstraction, only run dotnet CLI tests on CI PR #607 Hash package name during MCP server installation PR #618 @jwangxx (James Wang) Add "onExP" tag to enableRetryAfterFilteredResponse setting PR #479 Remove experimental setting for retrying after filtered response PR #830 @lipido (Daniel Glez-Peña) : Improve agent test coverage PR #614 @m4dc4p : Update getErrors (GetErrors / problems) tool PR #394 @rwoll (Ross Wollman) Fix auth for Copilot Chat running in automated VSC Extension Host PR #609 allow more services in Scenario Mode PR #653 plumb code on ChatErrorDetails PR #680 @shaunm-msft (Shaun Miller) Remove the message copilot_cache_control field from a context where there is no understanding of it PR #554 port PR 665 to simulator PR #694 @sridharavinash (Avinash Sridhar) : Add mode to conversation model messages PR #517 @yemohyleyemohyle : Add message length events to MSFT internal telemetry PR #473 @zhichli (Zhichao Li) Feature: add JSON export of chat prompt logs in chat debug view PR #672 Add tool and other metadata to chat debug json export PR #789 Remove tool calls from request type JSON logs exported from chat debug PR #794 Contributions to vscode-eslint : @AmarMuric04 (AmarMuric) docs: Update ESLint installation and configuration instructions PR #2062 docs: Remove duplicate text in README.md PR #2066 @davidtaylorhq (David Taylor) : Add probe support for Ember's glimmer-ts/glimmer-js format PR #2069 Contributions to vscode-extension-samples : @Sepush (Artea) : refactor(lsp-embedded-request-forwarding): clean useless code PR #1196 Contributions to vscode-js-debug : @LittleLittleCloud (Xiaoyun Zhang) : fix: handle localhost hostname in constructInspectorWSUri function PR #2260 Contributions to vscode-jupyter : @hunterhogan (Hunter Hogan) : Typos in package.nls.json PR #16890 @krassowski (Michał Krassowski) : Add support for custom CDN URLs PR #16885 Contributions to vscode-languageserver-node : @MariaSolOs (Maria José Solano) : Add capability information to textDocument/colorPresentation PR #1660 Contributions to vscode-markdown-languageservice : @remcohaszing (Remco Haszing) : Update @vscode/l10n to version 0.0.18 PR #199 Contributions to vscode-markdown-tm-grammar : @c-schuhmann (Christian Schuhmann) : Add support for SAP ABAP syntax PR #176 @esmasth (Siddharth Sharma) : Add support for YANG code fence PR #169 @Morikko (Eric Masseran) : Add restructuredtext support in markdown code block PR #178 @remcohaszing (Remco Haszing) Add support for jsonl code blocks PR #181 Add support for ignore code blocks PR #182 Contributions to vscode-pull-request-github : @krassowski (Michał Krassowski) : Fix typo "will be replace" → "will be replaced" PR #7540 Contributions to vscode-python-environments : @almarouk (Abdelrahman AL MAROUK) : fix: enhance conda executable retrieval with path existence checks PR #677 @sjsikora (Sam Sikora) : bug fix: Stricter pip list Package Parsing PR #698 Contributions to vscode-vsce : @tgrospic (Tomislav Grospić) : Avoid Node.js DEP0190 warning by using string form for prepublish command PR #1188 Contributions to debug-adapter-protocol : @jborean93 (Jordan Borean) : Add Ansible implementation PR #552 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @aartaka (Artyom Bologov) : Add cl-lsp (Common Lisp) to implementations list PR #2179 @anakin4747 (Anakin Childerhose) : Add kconfig-language-server PR #2177 @asukaminato0721 (Asuka Minato) : add ty PR #2175 @MariaSolOs (Maria José Solano) : Add capability information to textDocument/colorPresentation PR #2173 @notpeter (Peter Tripp) Fix broken anchor links in changelog PR #2171 Markdown whitespace formatting improvements PR #2172 @ribru17 (Riley Bruins) : Fix 3.18 metamodel version PR #2180 @skewb1k : correct grammar and consistency in lazy property descriptions PR #2170 Contributions to node-jsonc-parser : @operagxsasha : docs: edited the link to the badge tests PR #98 @pimterry (Tim Perry) : Add startLine & startCharacter to parser errors PR #102 Contributions to python-environment-tools : @almarouk (Abdelrahman AL MAROUK) : Fix conda env trace message PR #241 We really appreciate people trying our new features as soon as they are ready, so check back here often and learn what's new. If you'd like to read release notes for previous VS Code versions, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . On this page there are 15 sections On this page Chat MCP Accessibility Code Editing Editor Experience Notebooks Source Control Terminal Languages Contributions to extensions Extension Authoring Proposed APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://dev.to/t/technology/page/7 | Technology Page 7 - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. 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A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account Forem Close # technology Follow Hide General discussions about technology and its impact on society. Create Post Older #technology posts 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Posts Left menu 👋 Sign in for the ability to sort posts by relevant , latest , or top . Right menu Is Your Brain the Next Password? Diving into the World of Brain-Computer Interfaces karthikeyan karthikeyan karthikeyan Follow Sep 26 '25 Is Your Brain the Next Password? Diving into the World of Brain-Computer Interfaces # technology # programming # ai Comments Add Comment 3 min read Tired of Endless Passwords? Welcome to the Age of Passkeys! karthikeyan karthikeyan karthikeyan Follow Sep 27 '25 Tired of Endless Passwords? 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Biometric Authentication is Knocking at Your Door! # technology # programming # ai Comments Add Comment 3 min read Outil de Cybersécurité du Jour - Sep 24, 2025 CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise CyberMaîtrise Follow Sep 24 '25 Outil de Cybersécurité du Jour - Sep 24, 2025 # cybersecurity # security # tools # technology 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 3 min read ⚠️ Warning: "Optimism Bias" in Reinforcement Learning 🚨 Whe Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Oct 16 '25 ⚠️ Warning: "Optimism Bias" in Reinforcement Learning 🚨 Whe # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Busting the Myth: Federated Learning Beyond Labeled Data** Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Oct 16 '25 **Busting the Myth: Federated Learning Beyond Labeled Data** # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read "The Future of Generative AI: Beyond Mimicry, Towards Amplif Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Oct 16 '25 "The Future of Generative AI: Beyond Mimicry, Towards Amplif # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read **The Reality Behind Quantum Machine Learning (ML) Hype** T Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Oct 16 '25 **The Reality Behind Quantum Machine Learning (ML) Hype** T # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Unlocking Secure AI Processing at the Edge with Federated Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Oct 16 '25 **Unlocking Secure AI Processing at the Edge with Federated # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Revolutionizing Oncology: The Rise of AI-driven Digital Th Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Oct 16 '25 **Revolutionizing Oncology: The Rise of AI-driven Digital Th # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Unlocking Emotions in Audio with TensorFlow and Librosa: A Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 23 '25 **Unlocking Emotions in Audio with TensorFlow and Librosa: A # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Unleashing the Power of Duo Dynamics: A Novel AI Challenge Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 23 '25 **Unleashing the Power of Duo Dynamics: A Novel AI Challenge # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Unlocking Transparency in AI Decision-Making: The Power of Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 23 '25 **Unlocking Transparency in AI Decision-Making: The Power of # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming Comments Add Comment 1 min read **Unlocking Hidden Gems: T5 and the Uniter** ⚡ In the world Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Dr. Carlos Ruiz Viquez Follow Sep 23 '25 **Unlocking Hidden Gems: T5 and the Uniter** ⚡ In the world # ai # machinelearning # technology # programming Comments Add Comment 1 min read Is Your Fridge Smarter Than You? 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https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_90 | May 2024 (version 1.90) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 May 2024 (version 1.90) Update 1.90.2 : The update addresses these issues . Update 1.90.1 : The update addresses these issues . Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the May 2024 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Editor tabs multi-select - Select and perform actions on multiple tabs simultaneously. Profiles - Open new windows with your preferred profile. Editor actions - Immediately access editor actions across editor groups. Copilot extensibility - Build AI into your extensions with the Chat and Language Model API. VS Code Speech - Automatically read out Copilot Chat responses with text-to-speech. Find in notebooks - Restrict search to selected cells in notebooks. Chat context - Quickly attach different types of context in chat. IntelliSense in chat responses - Better understand generated code with IntelliSense. If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Accessibility Set keybindings from the accessibility help dialog Accessibility help dialogs give you an overview of important commands for a feature or view. When a command lacks a keybinding assignment, you can now configure it from within the accessibility help dialog with ⌥K (Windows, Linux Alt+K ) . Experimental: signal delay settings When the setting Debounce position changes is enabled, you can use the setting Signal options delays to customize the debouncing time for various accessibility signals. Workbench Editor tabs multi select You can now select multiple tabs simultaneously, enabling you to apply actions to multiple editors at once. This new feature enables you to move, pin, or close several tabs with a single action. To add another tab to your selection, use Ctrl + Click ( Cmd + Click on macOS). To select a range of tabs, use Shift + Click . Always show editor actions We are introducing the Always Show Editor Actions setting. When you enable this setting, the editor title actions of each editor group are always shown, regardless of whether the editor is active or not. When the setting is not enabled (default value), the editor actions are only shown when the editor is active: If you enable the setting, the editor actions are always available, even when the editor is not active: Set disable-lcd-text as a runtime argument With disable-lcd-text , you can disable RGB subpixel rendering on Windows. The disable-lcd-text setting is now supported as a runtime argument in the argv.json file. Previously, it was only available as an undocumented CLI flag. Use the Preferences: Configure Runtime Arguments command to configure the runtime arguments. In the following image you can see a side-by-side comparison, where on the left side disable-lcd-text is true , and on the right side it is false . Theme: Light Pink (preview on vscode.dev ) Configure custom profile for new window Previously, when you opened a new VS Code window, it used the profile of the active window or the default profile, if there was no active window. You can now specify which profile should be used when opening a new window by configuring the window.newWindowProfile setting. Source Control Focus input/resource group commands This milestone, we have added several workbench commands, so that you can create keyboard shortcuts for them: Focus on the next or previous source control input field: workbench.scm.action.focusNextInput , workbench.scm.action.focusPreviousInput Focus on the next or previous resource group within a repository: workbench.scm.action.focusNextResourceGroup , workbench.scm.action.focusPreviousResourceGroup Notebooks Find in cell selection When you're in a notebook, you can now use the Find control to search within specific ranges of selected cells. After you set notebook.experimental.find.scope.enabled to true , the Find in Cell Selection toggle will be available in the Find control. You can then select a range of cells and either open the Find control or, if it's already open, select the "Find in Cell Selection" button. Notebook Format Code Actions Notebooks now support a new kind of Code Action, which is defined with the notebook.format Code Action Kind prefix. These Code Actions can be triggered automatically via an explicit formatting request (using the command Notebook: Format Notebook ) or a formatting on save request. These can be used to provide more powerful formatting, through the use of Workspace Edits and Notebook Edits. To get started, check out an example extension in the vscode-extension-samples repository. Terminal ⚠️ Removal of the canvas renderer The canvas renderer was deprecated in the VS Code 1.89 release and is now removed completely. This means that on the small number of machines that do not support WebGL2, the terminal now uses the DOM-based renderer. You can read more about GPU acceleration in the terminal documentation . Rescaling overlapping glyph in the terminal The setting terminal.integrated.rescaleOverlappingGlyphs , introduced as a preview feature in the VS Code 1.88 release, is now enabled by default. This feature rescales glyphs that overlap following cells that are intended to cover ambiguous-width characters, and which might have font glyphs that don't match what the backing pty/unicode version thinks it is. For example, in most fonts the roman numeral unicode characters ( U+2160+ ) typically takes up multiple cells, so they are rescaled horizontally when this setting is enabled. Without rescaling: With rescaling: Contributions to extensions GitHub Copilot Attach context to chat To make your chat prompts more specific, you can add context to your chat messages. You can now attach more types of context to a chat message, such as workspace symbols. Previously, you used the '#' symbol to reference a file, or the current selection. Now, you can attach context to a chat message by selecting the 📎 icon in the Chat view input field, or by typing ⌘/ (Windows, Linux Ctrl+/ ) . Tip : Use the right arrow key to quickly attach context in the background while you keep the context picker open. When you're in the editor, you can also right-click on a selection and choose Copilot > Add Selection to Chat . Ask questions using Bing search and enterprise knowledge bases GitHub Copilot Enterprise users in VS Code can now ask questions that are enriched with context from web results and your enterprise's knowledge bases . To try out this functionality, install the latest pre-release of Copilot Chat. In the Chat view, you can ask questions like @github What is the latest LTS of Node.js? #web to take advantage of web search. Any search results referenced by Copilot are displayed in the Used References section of the chat response. You can also ask questions about your enterprise's knowledge bases, which are collections of Markdown repositories containing documentation, directly from VS Code. Simply type @github #kb to pick from the knowledge bases available to you. Similarly, any knowledge base snippets referenced by Copilot are displayed in the Used References section of the chat response. This enables Copilot Enterprise users to combine search results and internal documentation with editor context by using existing chat variables, such as #file and #selection . Please try it out and share your feedback with us at https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues ! IntelliSense in chat code blocks We now support basic IntelliSense within Copilot-generated code blocks. This lets you use many of the same IntelliSense tools that you might already use in the editor and can help you better understand the generated code. The supported IntelliSense features include: Go to definition by using ctrl click / cmd click or F12 Hovers Go to implementation Go to type definition IntelliSense can even be used with @workspace to learn about any workspace symbols that are used in Copilot responses. IntelliSense for TypeScript, JavaScript, HTML, and CSS code blocks is available out of the box. For additional language support, try installing an extension for that language, although not every language extension already has support for code block IntelliSense. Please file feature requests for any languages that aren't yet supporting this. Improved links in chat responses We improved chat responses by adding links for file names and symbols. By selecting these links, you can navigate to the corresponding file or symbol in the editor. Roam active chat between inline chat and Chat view You can now move a chat request that is completed or still active from inline chat to the Chat view. You might use this feature to clean up inline chat and move conversations to a more persistent place. To move a request, select the chat icon next to the chat input box. Automatic rename suggestions If you use the Copilot Chat extension, the Copilot-powered rename suggestions are now triggered automatically when you rename a symbol. You can turn this feature off by using the setting github.copilot.renameSuggestions.triggerAutomatically . Python Testing bug fixes The experience with pytest when using the Python Testing Rewrite has been improved to offer better support for setting pytest's cwd when it is adjacent to the VS Code workspace root, and for displaying parameterized tests on the test explorer when function names are repeated across classes. Additionally, we reduced some test discovery failure scenarios by adding the system configuration script path to PATH to enable shell for test execution. Experimental: Python Native REPL with Intellisense and Syntax Highlighting You can now run your Python code in an editor-like REPL environment equipped with features like Intellisense and syntax highlighting to make interactions with the REPL more efficient. To enable this feature, set "python.REPL.sendToNativeREPL": true in your settings.json file. This will execute code in the Python Native REPL on Shift+Enter and Run Selection/Line . You can opt to use the in-terminal Python REPL ( >>> ) by setting "python.REPL.sendToNativeREPL": false in your settings.json . Moreover, the Python Native REPL will smartly execute on Enter , similar to Python’s original interactive interpreter, if you add the setting "interactiveWindow.executeWithShiftEnter": false , in your settings.json . GitHub Pull Requests and Issues There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests extension, which enables you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. Review the changelog for the 0.90.0 release of the extension to learn about the other highlights. VS Code Speech We added support for text-to-speech capabilities to the VS Code Speech extension. A new setting accessibility.voice.autoSynthesize can be enabled to automatically read out aloud Copilot Chat responses when voice was also used as input. Notice how the microphone icon in the input field changes, indicating that text is read out aloud. To interrupt the synthesis, select the icon or press Escape . Each chat response also shows a new speaker icon, so that you can selectively read out a response aloud: You can change the language that is used for text-to-speech via the existing accessibility.voice.speechLanguage setting. Preview Features VS Code-native IntelliSense for PowerShell In addition to several reliability improvements, we made the following changes to PowerShell IntelliSense in the terminal: terminal.integrated.shellIntegration.suggestEnabled has changed to terminal.integrated.suggest.enabled The new terminal.integrated.suggest.quickSuggestions controls whether suggestions are shown when you type after whitespace The new terminal.integrated.suggest.suggestOnTriggerCharacters controls whether suggestions are shown when you type / , \ or - TypeScript 5.5 We continued improving our support for the upcoming TypeScript 5.5 release. Check out the TypeScript 5.5 beta blog post and iteration plan for details on this release. To start using the TypeScript 5.5 beta, install the TypeScript Nightly extension . Please share feedback and let us know if you run into any bugs with TypeScript 5.5. Issue Reporter for Web We have improved the issue reporting flow in VS Code for the Web to match what users currently have on desktop. Selecting Help: Report Issue opens the issue reporter page in a new window, where users can select a bug type, source, and extension if necessary. Extension information, system information, and more is automatically attached to the issue that is created in GitHub. This feature is currently disabled by default on this release, but please share feedback on it by turning on the issueReporter.experimental.webReporter setting. Extension authoring Use esbuild for extensions The yo code extension generators for TypeScript and Web now have an option to use esbuild as bundler. When you select esbuild , this creates a esbuild.js build script and adds script entries in package.json and build tasks in .vscode/tasks.json . To use esbuild in existing extensions, check out the bundling extensions and the web extensions guides. You can find a sample project at vscode-extension-samples/esbuild-sample . Chat and Language Model API We have finalized APIs that enable extensions to participate in chat and to access language models. See the extension sample and the chat extensions doc page for more information, or watch the Enhancing VS Code extensions with GitHub Copilot talk we delivered at the Microsoft Build conference. Important : These APIs are finalized but are currently only available in VS Code Insiders. Chat Participants The Chat Participants API enables extensions to extend GitHub Copilot Chat with a chat participant that can be invoked in the chat input field with @ . The participant can reply to user requests with markdown, a file tree, buttons to run VS Code commands, or other types of content. Language Model The Language Model API enables access to Copilot's chat models, such as gpt-3.5 and gpt-4. This API can be used for chat participants but also to enrich other features. The API is built around LanguageModelChat objects, which are used for chat requests and for counting tokens. The only way to access chat objects is the vscode.lm.selectChatModels function. The function accepts a selector to narrow down on different properties of chat models, for example by vendor, family, version, or identifier. The values are relatively free-form and must be looked up in the documentation of the extensions that provide them. Today, only the Copilot Chat extension contributes chat models. It uses the copilot vendor and current families are gpt-3.5-turbo and gpt-4 but are subject to change. The snippet shows how to select all chat models from the copilot -vendor: const models = await vscode . lm . selectChatModels ({ vendor: 'copilot' }); if ( models . length === 0 ) { // no models available return ; } Two things are very important when calling selectChatModels The function returns an empty array if no models are available and extensions must handle this case. Copilot's chat models require consent from the user before an extension can use them. Consent is implemented as authentication dialog. Because of that, selectChatModels should be called as part of a user-initiated action like a command, and not "out of the blue". With a chat object at hand, extensions can now use it to send chat requests. The following snippet shows how to send a chat request and process the response stream. // take the first model and say "Hello" const [ chat ] = models ; const messages = [ vscode . LanguageModelChatMessage . User ( 'Hello' )]; const response = await chat . sendRequest ( messages ); // the response is always an async iterable that can be consumed with for-await for await ( const part of response . text ) { console . log ( part ); } This is the gist of the language model API. Refer to the extension sample for a more complete example. Stay tuned for more samples, documentation, and further extensions of the API. The Java extension for VS Code is already using the Language Model API to provide Copilot-based rewrite capabilities for your Java code. Learn more about these updates in the Java in Visual Studio Code May 2024 blog post. @vscode/prompt-tsx library To aid with developing GitHub Copilot extensions for VS Code, we've developed and published a TSX-based library for declaring complex prompts and converting them to chat messages, subject to your LLM's context window limits. In developing this, we took inspiration from Anysphere's priompt library. If you're an extension author who is planning to use the chat and language model APIs, consider trying out the latest alpha release of this library: @vscode/prompt-tsx . Extending GitHub Copilot through GitHub Apps It is also possible to extend GitHub Copilot by contributing a GitHub App. This GitHub App can contribute a chat participant in the Chat view, which you can invoke with @ . A GitHub App is backed by a service and works across all GitHub Copilot surfaces, such as github.com, Visual Studio, or VS Code. GitHub Apps do not have full access to the VS Code API. To extend GitHub Copilot through a GitHub App, you should join the Copilot Partner Program . You can learn more by watching the Extending GitHub Copilot talk we delivered at the Microsoft Build conference. Debug Stack Focus API VS Code now exposes what stack frame and thread are focused in the Debug view via a new API. vscode.debug.activeStackItem retrieves what stack item (thread or stack frame) is currently focused, and vscode.debug.onDidChangeActiveStackItem is an event that fires when that changes. This is useful in conjunction with APIs that extend VS Code's debug capabilities, such as ones that use the DebugAdapterTracker . Learn more about creating a debugger extension . TestRunRequest.preserveFocus API Previously, test runs that were triggered by extensions would never move focus into the Test Results view in the same way that UI-initiated runs did. This behavior is now configurable via a preserveFocus flag that can be set when creating a TestRunRequest . This flag defaults to true to maintain backwards compatibility. Proposed APIs Attributable test coverage We're working on an API that enables attributing test coverage on a per-test basis. This lets users see which tests ran which code, filtering both the coverage shown in the editor and that in the Test Coverage view. Check vscode#212196 for more information and updates. Hover Verbosity Level Last milestone, a new API was proposed to provide hovers for which the verbosity can be increased or decreased. This milestone, the API has changed so that the HoverVerbosityRequest uses a verbosityDelta to signal the relative increase or decrease in the hover verbosity level. Previously, the HoverVerbosityRequest used an enum HoverVerbosityAction to signal if the verbosity should be increased or decreased. Engineering Tracking memory efficiency on startup We measure startup performance of VS Code insiders every day across Windows, macOS and Linux. Our main interest is how fast startup is until a text file is opened. This month we added another metric that we plan to improve to make startup even faster: how much memory do we consume and how much of that memory ends up being garbage collected by V8. If we can bring that number down, startup time will be less affected by V8 garbage collection runs. Electron 29 update In this milestone, we are promoting the Electron 29 update to users on our stable release. This update comes with Chromium 122.0.6261.156 and Node.js 20.9.0. We want to thank everyone who self-hosted on Insiders builds and provided early feedback. Notable fixes 212386 Local history: does not preserve entries from previously deleted file 213645 Aux window does not work in Firefox vscode-js-debug# 2000 / 2002 the JavaScript debugger is faster, especially dealing with source map renames Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @RedCMD (RedCMD) @starball5 (starball) @ArturoDent (ArturoDent) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @BrunoSoaresEngineering : feat(markdown-language-features): #208398 add avif as image extension PR #212547 @bsShoham (Shoham Ben Shitrit) : remove global enablement message PR #213128 @CharlesHGong (Hanning Gong (Charles)) : Fix an issue where defaultLinesDiffComputer does not pass in the timeout variable PR #213035 @cpendery (Chapman Pendery) : refactor: support dynamic terminal prompt detection without regex on windows PR #211382 @DatN99 (Dat Nguyen) : Added setting for notebook cell markdown lineheight PR #212531 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) Make codelenses work after switching from webview editor (fix #198309) PR #211999 Revive TimelineChangeEvent.uri if passed in TimelineProvider.onDidChange event PR #212927 @kdy1 (Donny/강동윤) : feat: Use official json schema for SWC PR #212158 @mahmoudsalah1993 (Mahmoud Salah) : Fire onDidRegisterAllSupported executions if any execution type is re… PR #212163 @Maximetinu (Miguel Medina Ballesteros) : Add AccessibilitySignal.terminalCommandSucceeded and success.mp3 (issue #178989) PR #204430 @OccasionalDebugger Respect stackframe deemphasize in getTopStackFrame PR #211855 Pass full function breakpoint options from plugin PR #211895 @pouyakary (Pouya Kary ✨) : Feat: Bolder Typeface + Configurable Letter Spacing for Minimap's Section Header Labels ✨ PR #209990 @sean-mcmanus (Sean McManus) : Add /** */ to cpp/language-configurations.json PR #211202 @SimonSiefke (Simon Siefke) fix: dispose template data disposables in source column renderer PR #202618 feature: enable typescript isolated modules PR #212913 Add editor.findMatchForeground PR #213497 fix wrong colors when editor findMatchForeground is not defined PR #213686 @walkerdb (Walker Boyle) : fix: tsserver no longer crashes when log path includes spaces PR #212752 @wenfangdu (Wenfang Du) : Add 'git-rebase-todo' to COMMON_FILES_FILTER in WorkspacesHistoryMainService PR #211614 @Yesterday17 (Yesterday17) : fix: remove temp dir if extension is installed by another source PR #213379 Contributions to vscode-eslint : @sapegin (Artem Sapegin) : feat: Allow eslint.rules.customizations to target all fixable rules PR #1841 Contributions to vscode-extension-samples : @moushicheng (某时橙) : fix: lsp-embedded-language-serviceadd add activationEvents to invoke client PR #936 Contributions to vscode-generator-code : @1chooo (Hugo ChunHo Lin) : Remove Unnecessary Spaces in ext-command-ts/vsc-extension-quickstart.md PR #467 @k35o (k8o) : convert spaces to tabs in files in vscode folder on templates folder PR #458 Contributions to vscode-hexeditor : @lorsanta (Lorenzo Santangelo) : add copy selection as different formats and paste hexstring support PR #498 @tomilho (Tomás Silva) : Add copyOffsetAsHex/Dec PR #521 Contributions to vscode-languageserver-node : @hyangah (Hyang-Ah Hana Kim) : Add SemanticTokenTypes.label PR #1423 @imbant (imbant) : fix “Semantic tokens that are not in ascending order will not be highlighted” PR #1467 @rchiodo (Rich Chiodo) : Support pulling diagnostics for notebooks too PR #1465 Contributions to vscode-mypy : @hamirmahal (Hamir Mahal) : fix: deprecated document getting usage PR #302 Contributions to vscode-remote-try-dotnet : @cmaneu (Christopher MANEU) : Migrate demo app to .NET 6 PR #31 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @asukaminato0721 (Asuka Minato) : add-make-lsp PR #1941 @fbricon (Fred Bricon) : Add LSP4IJ client to tools.md PR #1940 @macnetic (Magnus Oksbøl Therkelsen) : Add Verible language server for SystemVerilog PR #1929 @ssbarnea (Sorin Sbarnea) : Correct link to Ansible Language Server PR #1930 @wiremoons (Simon Rowe) : Update servers.md - add OLS for Odin language PR #1931 @ybiquitous (Masafumi Koba) : Add LanguageServer::Protocol in Ruby to SDKs PR #1937 Contributions to monaco-editor : @htcfreek (Heiko) : Add extension to csp.contribution.ts PR #4504 @jakebailey (Jake Bailey) : Call clearFiles on internal EmitOutput diagnostics, pass args down PR #4482 @johnyanarella (John Yanarella) : Update TypeScript to TS 5.4.5 in all projects, vendored files PR #4305 @samstrohkorbatt : Adding Python f-string syntax support PR #4401 On this page there are 12 sections On this page Accessibility Workbench Source Control Notebooks Terminal Contributions to extensions Preview Features Extension authoring Proposed APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_40#_extension-authoring | October 2019 (version 1.40) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. 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Downloads: Windows: x64 | Mac: Intel | Linux: deb rpm tarball snap Welcome to the October 2019 release of Visual Studio Code. As announced in the October iteration plan , we focused on housekeeping GitHub issues and pull requests as documented in our issue grooming guide . Across all of our VS Code repositories, we closed (either triaged or fixed) 4622 issues, which is even more than during our last housekeeping iteration in September 2018, where we closed 3918 issues. While we closed issues, you created 2195 new issues. This resulted in a net reduction of 2427 issues. The main vscode repository now has 2162 open feature requests and 725 open bugs. In addition, we closed 287 pull requests. As part of this effort, we have also tuned our process and updated the issue triaging workflow . Same as last year, we used the live tracker from Benjamin Lannon to track our progress: During this housekeeping milestone, we also addressed several feature requests and community pull requests . Read on to learn about new features and settings. Workbench Activity Bar indicator We've introduced a new indicator for the active item in Activity Bar to make it stand out better and increase readability. We also tuned the inactive foreground colors for a stronger contrast with the active element. You can control the active indicator via the new color token, activityBar.activeBorder . We also introduced an optional background color for the active element, activityBar.activeBackground , and when configured can look like so: Themable window border We've introduced two new theme colors, window.activeBorder and window.inactiveBorder , for providing a border around the VS Code window. The window.activeBorder applies to the active (focused) window, while the window.inactiveBorder applies to inactive (unfocused) windows. These new colors do not inherit from any color, so they must either be provided by the theme or by the workbench.colorCustomizations setting. If only one color is specified, a border with that color will be applied to both active and inactive windows. List and tree keyboard scrolling You can now press ⌘↑ (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Up ) and ⌘↓ (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Down ) to scroll lists and trees using the keyboard. Fewer notifications in Zen mode While using Zen mode, notification toasts will no longer distract you unless they inform about errors. You can control this behavior with the new zenMode.silentNotifications setting. You can always access all notifications from the status bar by clicking on the notification icon in the bottom-right corner. Type filters for outline and breadcrumbs There are new settings to configure what symbols are displayed in the Outline view and breadcrumb navigation. The settings are called outline.show{symbol type} and breadcrumbs.show{symbol type} . For example, outline.showVariables , outline.showFunctions , etc. The screen shot above shows the Outline view configured to not show local variables and you can see that the variable hidden isn't shown. Note that it's up to the language extension to assign the type of a symbol. You can hover over the symbol label in the Outline view to see which symbol type is being used (shown in parentheses). Control the sizing behavior when splitting editors A new setting workbench.editor.splitSizing controls the layout of editors when splitting them. By default, the size will be distributed evenly among all editors as shown below: Change this setting to split for the current editor to be split in half and not affect the size of other editors: Disable GPU acceleration We have heard issue reports from users that seem related to how the GPU is used to render VS Code's UI. These users have a much better experience when running VS Code with the additional --disable-gpu command-line argument. Running with this argument will disable the GPU hardware acceleration and fall back to a software renderer. To make life easier, you can add this flag as a setting so that it does not have to be passed on the command line each time. To add this flag: Open the Command Palette ( ⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P ) ). Run the Preferences: Configure Runtime Arguments command. This command will open a argv.json file to configure runtime arguments. You might see some default arguments there already. Add "disable-hardware-acceleration": true . Restart VS Code. Note: Do not use this setting unless you are seeing issues! Editor files.eol per language The files.eol setting can now be set per language. For example, you could define that all files of 'mylanguage' language identifier use \n as the default end-of-line sequence for all new files. "[mylanguage]" : { "files.eol" : " \n " } The end-of-line sequence is used for new files. For existing files, the current end-of-line sequence is always preserved. To change the end-of-line sequence for an existing file, use the Change End Of Line Sequence command. Using a files.eol language setting, the default end-of-line sequence for 'shellscript' is now defined as \n . Minimap scaling and improved font rendering A new setting editor.minimap.scale configures the minimap's size to one of several constant values, particularly useful for high DPI or ultra-wide displays. Also, the rendering of the minimap's font is now smoother and clearer. Definition Preview Hover from the keyboard There is a new command Show Definition Preview Hover for better accessibility of the definition preview hover widget, which can be triggered by hovering a symbol with the mouse and pressing a modifier key dependent on the platform and configuration. Previously, only the command Show Hover was provided, which is equivalent to hovering the mouse cursor over a symbol. Now, with Show Definition Preview Hover , the detailed hover information can be shown via the keyboard. Improvements to bracket matching Previously, VS Code would only highlight matching brackets when the cursor was next to a bracket character. Now VS Code will always highlight enclosing brackets if they exist. We have also adjusted our Go to Bracket and Select to Bracket actions to use enclosing brackets. Duplicate selection We have added a new action named Duplicate Selection . When executed, the current selection will be duplicated and the result will be selected. When there is no selection, the current line will be duplicated, all without writing to the system clipboard. Font feature settings There is now more fine grained control over the font features. When configuring "editor.fontLigatures": true , VS Code would turn on liga and calt . But some fonts have more settings, such as stylistic sets used by Fira Code . We now allow these font features to be explicitly controlled, for example: "editor.fontFamily" : "Fira Code" , "editor.fontLigatures" : true , "[javascript]" : { "editor.fontLigatures" : "'ss02', 'ss19'" , }, The above settings configure the editor to use the Fira Code font family, turn on font ligatures for all languages, and in JavaScript files enable the 'Horizontal Bar' ('ss02') and the 'Dotted zero' ('ss19') font feature settings. These make the >= ligature render with a horizontal bar and the 0 render with a dot inside it in JavaScript: Better handling for Unicode combining characters We have made improvements around handling of Unicode combining characters and we treat such sequences as atomic characters (in cursor movement, editing operations, or in block cursor rendering). This is best demonstrated using the block cursor style and a before/after animation: Before: After: In a related change, the status bar now shows the Unicode point count in the Col section. Cursor Redo The Soft Undo command has been renamed to Cursor Undo . This action is useful, for example when using ⌘D (Windows, Linux Ctrl+D ) to select the next match and going one time too far, as it undoes only the last cursor state change. Additionally, we now have added Cursor Redo , which redoes the previously undone cursor state change. Diff editor improvements The built-in diff computation used to have a hard-coded timeout of 5 seconds, after which it would give up and return a non-minimal diff. You can now configure this timeout using "diffEditor.maxComputationTime" and setting the timeout to 0 will always compute a minimal diff, no matter how long that would take. Additionally, the diff editor now renders a progress bar when the computation takes longer than one second. A source of confusion when using the diff editor was when comparing files with only leading or trailing whitespace differences and the diff editor was configured to ignore trim whitespace. This would result in Source Control showing the files as modified, while the diff editor would render no diffs. VS Code now displays a Show Whitespace Differences button when it detects this case to help you quickly show diffs in whitespace. This can be toggled using the Show/Ignore Trim Trailing Whitespace Difference command at the top of the diff editor: Integrated Terminal Chords are now supported by default The new setting terminal.integrated.allowChords (default true ) allows keybindings that are part of a chord keybinding to skip the terminal for evaluation and instead get handled by VS Code (bypassing the terminal.integrated.commandsToSkipShell allow list). Note that the same limitations around keybindings in the terminal still apply; the chord keybinding with the highest priority will be considered when making this evaluation. For example, if an extension contributes keybinding Ctrl+M A and you have the following defined in your keybindings.json file: [ { "key" : "ctrl+m a" , "command" : "workbench.action.terminal.toggleTerminal" }, { "key" : "ctrl+m a" , "command" : "workbench.action.focusLastEditorGroup" } ] Ctrl+M A will result in the workbench.action.focusLastEditorGroup command executing since it's the final keybinding and user keybindings are of higher priority than extension contributed keybindings. Fast scroll support The terminal now supports Alt with mouse wheel to scroll faster based on the multiplier defined in the editor.fastScrollSensitivity setting. New "paste" option for right-click behavior A new option has been added to the rightClickBehavior setting to always paste in the terminal on right-click: "terminal.integrated.rightClickBehavior" : "paste" Double-click to select word uses more separator characters The characters , , : , and ; are now counted as word separators when double-clicking to select a word(s) in the terminal. Symlink cwds are no longer resolved If a terminal's initial working directory is set to a symlink, the symlink will now be preserved in the terminal. Command navigation now works from the scroll position Command navigation enables navigating between or selecting between commands that have been run in the terminal. This now takes the scroll position of the terminal into account so you can scroll, find the previous command, and the terminal will scroll up from the terminal's viewport (previously it would scroll from the bottom). Command navigation is only bound on macOS by default as Cmd+Up/Down and command selection as Cmd+Shift+Up/Down . Here are some example keybindings if you want to use this feature on Windows or Linux: { // Terminal command tracking on Windows and Linux { "key" : "ctrl+up" , "command" : "workbench.action.terminal.scrollToPreviousCommand" , "when" : "terminalFocus" }, { "key" : "ctrl+down" , "command" : "workbench.action.terminal.scrollToNextCommand" , "when" : "terminalFocus" }, { "key" : "ctrl+shift+up" , "command" : "workbench.action.terminal.selectToPreviousCommand" , "when" : "terminalFocus" }, { "key" : "ctrl+shift+down" , "command" : "workbench.action.terminal.selectToNextCommand" , "when" : "terminalFocus" }, } Tasks Task Quick Pick lists The Tasks: Configure Task command now always skips the Quick Pick list of tasks if you only have one task defined. To extend this behavior to Tasks: Run Task and other task Quick Picks, you can set the task.quickOpen.skip setting to true . The new setting task.quickOpen.history controls how many tasks are shown in the task Quick Pick as recently used tasks. Set task.quickOpen.history to 0 to disable the recent tasks section of the tasks Quick Pick. Tasks that have a detail property will now show it in some task lists. You can turn off details in the task Quick Pick by setting task.quickOpen.detail to false . Option to run NPM scripts for a folder When the setting npm.enableRunFromFolder is enabled, the File Explorer's context menu shows the command Run NPM Script in Folder... when a folder is selected. The command shows a Quick Pick list of the NPM scripts contained in this folder and you can select the script to be executed as a task. Slow task provider warning When a task provider is running slowly, we now show a warning offering suggestions for how to avoid the slowdown. The warning can be disabled for individual task types, or it can be disabled for all tasks by setting task.slowProviderWarning to false . Disable task autodetection If all the tasks you care about are defined in a tasks.json file, then you might want to disable all extension task providers to improve performance when you run tasks. It is good practice for individual extensions to provide a setting to disable their task providers, but you can now disable all task providers setting task.autoDetect to off . Problem matcher prompt In the past, any task without a problem matcher would need to have an empty problem matcher set in tasks.json to skip the problem matcher prompt. Now, you can use task.problemMatchers.neverPrompt to disable the problem matcher prompt for all tasks or for specific task types. There's also a new option in the problem matcher prompt to disable the prompt. Source Control Highlight file on active editor change The Source Control view will now automatically highlight the active editor file in its tree/list view: Git: Improved untracked files management You can now manage untracked files separately by using the Git: Untracked Changes setting. Choose the separate option, if you'd like to see untracked files in a separate group in the Source Control view. Choose hidden if you'd like to never see them. The default commit action will adjust itself to this setting and will only include untracked changes in a commit when using the mixed setting value. Git: Automatic commit message on merge commits Whenever VS Code detects you're in a middle of a git merge commit, it will automatically populate the commit input box with Git's default commit message. Git: Reveal in Explorer There's now a context menu action Reveal in Explorer to reveal files in the File Explorer, from a Git repository in the Source Control view. Git: Clone progress The clone operation now supports displaying progress in the bottom-right corner notification: Debugging Breakpoints can be shown in overview ruler To make life easier when working with breakpoints in large files, you can now show breakpoints in the editor's overview ruler by enabling the new setting debug.showBreakpointsInOverviewRuler . PreLaunch tasks for compound debug configurations Today every debug configuration can specify a task to be run before the debug session is started via the preLaunchTask attribute. This works well when debugging a single program, but it gets unwieldy when using compound configurations where multiple programs are involved. In this milestone, we've added support for a preLaunchTask per compound debug configuration. With this addition, a single task can build all debug targets before the individual debug sessions are started. In case of a build error, no session is started. Languages CSS media query symbols In CSS/SCSS/Less files, media query symbols are now shown in the Outline view, the breadcrumb path, and the Go to Symbols in File list: typescript.tsserver.maxTsServerMemory If you are working with a large TypeScript project containing thousands of files, the new typescript.tsserver.maxTsServerMemory setting lets you increase the maximum memory usage for the TypeScript server that powers IntelliSense. Extension authoring vscode.env.uiKind A new API vscode.env.uiKind was added so that an extension can know in which kind of UI is it running. To support running VS Code in a browser, the possible values are UIKind.Web and UIKind.Desktop . Call Hierarchy Provider API We have finalized the call hierarchy provider API: CallHierarchyProvider . It supports the Peek Call Hierarchy feature, which finds callers to and calls from functions, methods, etc. Task CustomExecution The CustomExecution task type API has been finalized. If a shell or process task isn't suitable for your task, you can use a CustomExecution task to execute a callback in your extension. Learn more in the task provider extension guide . Debug API: "consoleMode" option for "startDebugging" request In the last milestone, we had introduced a new proposed API for controlling whether a hierarchy of debug sessions shares a single Debug Console or use individual consoles. This API is now official so you can use it in extensions published on the Marketplace. Icon color tokens We're excited to finally introduce new color tokens for our icons. We're slowly adding these for certain areas, below is the first batch. Symbols These icons appear in the Outline view, breadcrumb navigation, and suggest widget. symbolIcon.arrayForeground symbolIcon.booleanForeground symbolIcon.classForeground symbolIcon.colorForeground symbolIcon.constructorForeground symbolIcon.constantForeground symbolIcon.enumeratorForeground symbolIcon.enumeratorMemberForeground symbolIcon.eventForeground symbolIcon.fieldForeground symbolIcon.fileForeground symbolIcon.folderForeground symbolIcon.functionForeground symbolIcon.interfaceForeground symbolIcon.keyForeground symbolIcon.keywordForeground symbolIcon.methodForeground symbolIcon.moduleForeground symbolIcon.namespaceForeground symbolIcon.nullForeground symbolIcon.numberForeground symbolIcon.objectForeground symbolIcon.operatorForeground symbolIcon.packageForeground symbolIcon.propertyForeground symbolIcon.referenceForeground symbolIcon.snippetForeground symbolIcon.stringForeground symbolIcon.structForeground symbolIcon.textForeground symbolIcon.typeParameterForeground symbolIcon.unitForeground symbolIcon.variableForeground Problems and Notifications We've set the default colors for the problems and notifications icons to inherit from the editor foreground colors, so if you change those colors, it will inherit to the other areas: You can also explicitly set the icon colors for the Problems panel and Notifications: problemsErrorIcon.foreground problemsWarningIcon.foreground problemsInfoIcon.foreground notificationsErrorIcon.foreground notificationsInfoIcon.foreground notificationsWarningIcon.foreground Lightbulb The lightbulb icons are also themable: editorLightBulb.foreground editorLightBulbAutoFix.foreground vscode.env.asExternalUri The vscode.env.asExternalUri API allows an extension to resolve an external URI - such as a http: or https: URI - from where the extension is running to a URI for the same resource on the client machine. This is a companion to the vscode.env.openExternal API, except instead of opening the resolved URI using an external program, it returns the result to extensions. import * as vscode from 'vscode' ; import * as http from 'http' ; const PORT = 3000 ; export function activate ( context : vscode . ExtensionContext ) { startLocalServer ( PORT ); context . subscriptions . push ( vscode . commands . registerCommand ( 'example.command' , async () => { const resolved = vscode . env . asExternalUri ( vscode . Uri . parse ( `http://localhost: ${ PORT } ` ) ); vscode . window . showInformationMessage ( `Resolved to: ${ resolved } on client and copied to clipboard` ); vscode . env . clipboard . writeText ( resolved . toString ()); }) ); } function startLocalServer ( port : number ) { const server = http . createServer (( req , res ) => { res . end ( 'Hello world!' ); }); server . on ( 'clientError' , ( err , socket ) => { socket . end ( 'HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request \r\n\r\n ' ); }); server . listen ( port ); vscode . window . showInformationMessage ( `Started local server on port: ${ port } ` ); } For http: and https: URIs, asExternalUri is a no-op if the extension is running on the client machine. However, if the extension is running remotely, vscode.env.asExternalUri automatically establishes a port forwarding tunnel from the local machine to target on the remote and returns a local URI to the tunnel. If asExternalUri is called with a vscode.env.uriScheme URI, then it returns a URI that - if opened in a browser (for example via openExternal ) - will result in the registered URI handler being triggered. Removal of experimental Custom Data settings and Contribution Points [html/css].experimental.customData settings and contributes.[html/css].experimental.customData Contribution Points were deprecated in 1.38 and now removed. You can use the stable Custom Data settings and Contribution Points instead. To read more about the Custom Data Format, see the microsoft/vscode-custom-data repository. extensionKind can be an array In package.json , the extensionKind property could have the value "ui" or "workspace" to indicate where an extension should run in the remote case. With this release, extensionKind can now be an array. For example, ["ui", "workspace"] would indicate that an extension can run both on the "ui" and "workspace" side, with a preference to running on the "ui" side, if installed there. Proposed extension APIs Every milestone comes with new proposed APIs and extension authors can try them out. As always, we are keen on your feedback. This is what you have to do to try out a proposed API: You must use Insiders because proposed APIs change frequently. You must have this line in the package.json file of your extension: "enableProposedApi": true . Copy the latest version of the vscode.proposed.d.ts file into your project's source location. Note that you cannot publish an extension that uses a proposed API. There may be breaking changes in the next release and we never want to break existing extensions. Support IntelliSense replace mode We are working on a feature that allows users to decide if suggestions should replace existing text or just be inserted. For example, accepting console inside con|st can result in console (replace) or consolest (insert). Both modes have merit and it eventually depends on the current context and user preference. For this feature to work best, we need extensions to tell us what to do. Therefore we are proposing to add a new type to the CompletionItem#range property, changing it like this: interface CompletionItem { range ?: Range | { insert : Range ; replace : Range }; } The range continues to be optional or be a simple range but it can also be two ranges: one for insert and one for replace. See Issue #10266 for more details. Task detail There is a new property on Task that task providers can use to add a detail to the task when it is shown in UI. You can also use the detail property in tasks.json . The built-in npm extension uses the task detail to show which npm script will run. Support for passing WebviewPanelOptions to Custom Editors We continued our work on the Custom Editor API proposal this iteration. Now the proposed registerWebviewEditorProvider function takes a set of options that lets you enable retainContextWhenHidden and other features in custom editor webviews: export function registerWebviewEditorProvider ( viewType : string , provider : WebviewEditorProvider , options ?: WebviewPanelOptions ): Disposable ; Engineering Test VS Code running in a browser There is now a minimal setup where VS Code can run in a browser that is available for development and testing. The browser instance is still missing some features and is under active development. In your local fork of the vscode repository, execute yarn web from the command line and access http://localhost:8080/ . For more details about cloning and building the vscode repo, see the setup instructions . Note: Do not use this setup for any serious development. The intent is to allow the community to contribute changes back to VS Code to improve the overall experience in the browser. Building VS Code with TypeScript 3.7 VS Code is now built using TypeScript 3.7. This is an exciting update as it lets us use optional chaining ( ?. ) in our codebase (as well as bringing many other improvements). You can start using TypeScript 3.7 features in VS Code today by installing the JavaScript and TypeScript Nightly extension . Electron 6.0 Update In this milestone, we finished the exploration of bundling Electron 6 into VS Code, making it the first time this Electron version ships with stable. This is a major Electron release and comes with Chromium 76.0.3809.146 and Node.js 12.4.0 (a major leap forward from our current version with Chromium 69 and Node.js 10.11.0). We have started to explore updating to Electron 7, which we hope to push to Insiders soon. Notable fixes 78634 : Terminal content goes missing when resizing (powershell/conpty) 25854 : Can't drag Markdown preview to start a new editor group 81824 : Webview editor doesn't appear in Open Previous Editor From History command Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You! to the following folks that helped to make VS Code even better: Contributions to our issue tracking: John Murray (@gjsjohnmurray) Alexander (@usernamehw) Andrii Dieiev (@IllusionMH) Please see our Community Issue Tracking page, if you want to help us manage incoming issues. Contributions to vscode : Adam Burgess (@adamburgess) : Add paste option on right click for terminal PR #81448 André Casal (@andrecasal) : Clarified git.confirmEmptyCommits description PR #83257 Anirudh Rayabharam (@anirudhrb) Use the editor font size for the breakpoint widget PR #83153 Show breakpoints in overview ruler PR #82787 Anthony Dresser (@anthonydresser) : Update sql language syntax PR #77601 Brian Malehorn (@bmalehorn) : search: remove unused config settings PR #82019 Callum Mellor-Reed (@callummr) : Focus correct SCM repo when restoring editors PR #79566 Dave Alongi (@dalongi) : Hide Help > Report Issue menu item when issue reporter is disabled in product.json PR #83561 Dhairya Nadapara (@dhairyanadapara) : added split pane options to settings PR #82888 DiamondYuan (@DiamondYuan) : Support Update VS Code from Command Palette PR #77515 Drew Cross (@drew212) : Adding git stash drop for issue 76195 PR #76342 Edward Thomson (@ethomson) GitHub Actions: only run on main branch PR #83158 CI Builds with GitHub Actions PR #82992 Alexandr Fadeev (@fadeevab) : Makefile testcase for updated scheme to support the following: var:=$(val:.c=.o) PR #83121 Andrew Wong (@featherbear) : Change checks for present command line arguments PR #83311 Freddy Robinson (@frobinsonj) Filter out dead keys in tree keyboard navigation PR #82972 Filter out Media keys in tree keyboard navigation PR #83218 @gawicks : When resolving a merge conflict allow accepting the default message PR #66522 John Murray (@gjsjohnmurray) : Remove hyphen in formatter-related messages PR #83538 @HonkingGoose : Use HTTPS for link to Emmet cheat sheet. PR #82754 Hung-Wei Hung (@hunghw) : Fix #79428 - add "$WORKSPACE_FOLDER" for snippet PR #79764 Andrew Liu (@hypercubestart) : Fix 30419 and 80649 - Allow Setting the Number of Recent Tasks PR #82757 Andrii Dieiev (@IllusionMH) : Fallback to PCRE2 if match whole word used with regexp PR #82072 @Jakobeha : Config option to separate or hide untracked files (addresses #35480) PR #80083 Jean Pierre (@jeanp413) Fix git repository not detected if root folder ends in [space] PR #82038 Fixes debug console stops autoscrolling when a line wraps around PR #82945 Fix scrolling behavior in menu while zoomed in PR #80965 Jakob Fahr (@jfhr) : Fix #82199, numbers hard to read in light theme markdown preview PR #82450 Liming Jin (@jinliming2) : fix: error when filling in the HTTP proxy address in IPv6 format PR #77260 Jon Bockhorst (@jmbockhorst) Change terminal link hover widget position to be consistent PR #83175 Confirm "Undo last commit" if its a merge commit PR #71525 Add new remote option when publishing branch PR #71434 Show git clone progress bar and percentage complete PR #71341 Jonas Platte (@jplatte) : linux/bin/code.sh: use command -v instead of which PR #82097 JavaScript Joe (@jsjoeio) : fix: remove TypeScript from ExtensionSuggestions PR #82125 Jesús Alonso Abad (@Kencho) : Perl5 support to fold POD blocks PR #71448 Nikolay Kondratyev (@kondratyev-nv) Render Octicons in CodeLens PR #82062 Use yarn compile for start scripts PR #81840 Kryštof Řeháček (@Krystofee) : Added RANDOM, RANDOM_HEX snippet variables PR #82529 Kumar Harsh (@kumarharsh) : fix(workbench): add preference to disable recently used tasks PR #61994 Lio李欧 (@lionello) : StartFindWithSelectionAction should not focus the find widget PR #63176 @MartinBrathen : Fixed: Image preview should not zoom on first click if unfocused PR #82074 Per Persson (@md2perpe) : Add missing preposition PR #82613 Niklas Mollenhauer (@nikeee) : Remove executable bits from non-executable files PR #82103 @NotWearingPants Add cursorRedo command (Ctrl+Shift+J) PR #82620 Rename cursorUndo/Redo commands from "Soft Undo/Redo" to "Cursor Undo/Redo" PR #82930 Nate Rauh (@NRauh) : Feature/pin close others PR #82545 Oxirt (@oxirt) : allow Git: fetch command to show password prompt PR #72615 @simaosilva : support editorHoverWidget.foreground PR #65170 Prabhanjan S Koushik (@skprabhanjan) Fix #82200 - "Preserve Case" button in search viewlet is not tabbable PR #82485 Fix-81729 Preserve case in Search and Replace isn't working when I use group substitution PR #81858 saif (@sksaifuddin) : Fix #78014 Added Capability to escape |, < and >in addition to & and ^ PR #82704 @smilegodly : Add a clear button to settings editor search bar PR #82904 Sohail Rajdev (@sohailrajdev97) : add support for command line arguments in grunt task runner PR #82819 Konstantin Solomatov (@solomatov) Replace Disposable[] with DisposableStore PR #80684 Open New Terminal -> Open New External Terminal PR #82380 Fix async race condition in the tree PR #82881 Charles Milette (@sylveon) : Skip quick picker when there is only one task to select from PR #47853 U-ways (@U-ways) : fix image preview to show correct canvas size PR #82027 Alexander (@usernamehw) Add default styles for tags PR #83300 Add branch name to commit input box PR #80335 Jeremy Shore (@w9jds) #70254 - Set astrisk as a delimiter for URIs PR #82816 #75938 - Added in setting for diff gutter visibility PR #82209 Ԝеѕ (@wesinator) : Add .har extension to JSON language PR #77300 Xhulio Hasani (@xuhas) : added deleteTag PR #74345 Yusuke Yamada (@yamachu) : Fixed the problem of overwriting many characters in suggestion PR #82349 Keyon You (@youngyou) : Press space key on a disabled button should not trig click event. PR #81975 Helen3141 (@helen3141) : Enable running individual npm scripts in the containing folder PR #79960 Contributions to language-server-protocol : Adedayo Adetoye (aka Dayo) (@adedayo) : Removed duplicate foldingRangeProvider field in ServerCapabilities PR 848 Contributions to vscode-eslint : Christian Batchelor (@CSBatchelor) : README.md Typo PR #777 Contributions to vscode-json-languageservice : Ben Hutton (@Relequestual) : Updated error message for draft 2019-09 PR #45 Contributions to vscode-css-languageservice : Sergey Zolotarev (@sryze) : Wrap URI.parse() call in try ... catch PR #180 Contributions to node-jsonc-parser : KoyamaSohei (@KoyamaSohei) : Fix typo in README PR #25 Jakub Rożek (@P0lip) : parse function should include properties with empty string as their keys PR #24 Contributions to debug-adapter-protocol : Peter Thomas (@ptrthomas) : adding karate as a dap implementation PR #78 Contributions to vscode-vsce : Ritwick Dey (@ritwickdey) : [Added] Relative sources in tags in README.md are not rewritten to absolute URLs PR #208 Theo Tzaferis (@tzfrs) : Improve error message when packaging an extension with an unchanged README.md PR #392 Contributions to inno-updater : Adam Coyne (@bhank) : Increase control width to avoid truncating text PR #13 Contributions to localization : There are over 800 Cloud + AI Localization community members using the Microsoft Localization Community Platform (MLCP), with over about 100 active contributors to Visual Studio Code. We appreciate your contributions, either by providing new translations, voting on translations, or suggesting process improvements. Here is a snapshot of contributors . For details about the project including the contributor name list, visit the project site at https://aka.ms/vscodeloc . Bosnian (Latin, Bosnia and Herzegovina): Adnan Rizvan. Czech: Michal Franc, Jan Hruby. Danish: Lasse Stilvang, Frederik bruun. Dutch: Laurens Kwanten, Lemuel Gomez, Niels ter Haar. English (United Kingdom): Graham Smith, Martin Littlecott, Alexander McLean. French: Antoine Griffard, Rodolphe NOEL, Bruno Lewin, Maxime Bouveron, DJ Dakta. German: Simon Haag, Adrian Bähr, Julian Tomsik. Hebrew: Ariel Bachar. Hindi: Kishan K, Rohit Raj. Chinese Simplified: Yizhi Gu, paul cheung, 斌 项, 顺 谭, 一斤瓜子, Charles Lee, Peng Zeng, Charles Dong, 楠 姜, yungkei fan, ztluo, David Huang, 普鲁文, Zhen-Qi Liu, zhichen zhao, Phil Wang. Chinese Traditional: Jimmy Hu, 船長, E L, Winnie Lin. Indonesian: Jakka Prihatna, Eriawan Kusumawardhono, Nicko Satria Utama, Christian Elbrianno, Septian Adi. Italian: Alessandro Alpi, Luigi Bruno. Japanese: Yuta Ojima, Michihito Kumamoto, Aya Tokura, TENMYO Masakazu, Takayuki Fuwa, Koichi Makino. Korean: Hongju, Sungjin Jeong. Polish: Andrzej Poblocki, Kacper Łakomski. Portuguese (Brazil): Marcelo Fernandes, Marcondes Alexandre, Roberto Fonseca, Alessandro Fragnani, Arthur Renato, Jota Freitas Jr, Caio Felippe Curitiba Marcellos. Portuguese(Portugal): Pedro Filipe. Romanian: Andrei Tudor, Bogdan Mateescu, Stefan Gabos. Russian: Kazakov Lex, Vadim Svitkin, TJS. Spanish: Aleks M, José María Aguilar, Jerónimo Milea, Ricardo Estrada Rdez, Abdón Rodríguez P.. Swedish: Sven Axelsson, Patric Högman. Tamil: Pradeep Krishnan. Turkish: Ahmetcan Aksu, Cansu Gürler, Mehmet Yönügül, Umut Can Alparslan. Ukrainian: Arthur Murauskas, Oleh Hatsenko, Oleksandr Krasnokutskyi, Did Kokos. Vietnamese: huy dk, Việt Anh Nguyễn, Ha Xuan Anh Nguyen, Quoc Han Dinh. On this page there are 12 sections On this page Workbench Editor Integrated Terminal Tasks Source Control Debugging Languages Extension authoring Proposed extension APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://www.linkedin.com/posts/gittower_we-have-added-a-new-workflows-section-to-activity-7394403770585104385-AKjz | We have added a new "Workflows" section to git-flow-next 😎 Here you'll find information about each available preset, enabling you to select the one that best suits your project. You can also create… | Tower Agree & Join LinkedIn By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . Skip to main content LinkedIn Top Content People Learning Jobs Games Sign in Join now Tower’s Post Tower 641 followers 2mo Report this post We have added a new "Workflows" section to git-flow-next 😎 Here you'll find information about each available preset, enabling you to select the one that best suits your project. You can also create your own unique branching workflow! Check it out 👉 https://git-flow.sh 6 Like Comment Share Copy LinkedIn Facebook X To view or add a comment, sign in More Relevant Posts Zacharia Kimotho 2mo Report this post Testing out a new workflow to backup and version my n8n workflows Quick rundown - Backups only workflows with changes to GitHub every 10 minutes. Others are ignored. This can be active or inactive projects and each goes to its respective folder - We run a system to fetch the workflows and organize them based on their commit history - Compare the changes as they happened over time - Each commit contains the changes that happened eg nodes moved around, added, deleted, parameter changes and all. Makes it easy to point what changed and when - Finally add in an easy copy button to automatically copy the workflow json for import to our n8n canvas to "restore" the given version So far this has been in play for the last few days and was able to preview and track histories across workflows to a larger extent Possibilities - For the advanced teams, they can extend this functionality create detailed log changes per given workflows including the editor and changes made to the workflow - This can be extended to work as the go to backup and recovery system as all changes can be tracked 10 minutes across Happy productivity! 17 8 Comments Like Comment Share Copy LinkedIn Facebook X To view or add a comment, sign in Amir Azimi Alasti 2mo Edited Report this post Stop Wasting Time on Maven Builds: Lessons from J-Fall 2025 That Turn Minutes into Seconds 🚀 I had a great time at J-Fall 2025, especially the session “Accelerating Maven Builds: From Snail’s Pace 🐌 to Rocket Speed 🚀” by Maarten Mulders . It was a sharp reminder to treat the build as a first-class production system and continuously loop through Measure → Analyse → Improve instead of randomly tuning flags and hoping for the best. Key takeaways I’m bringing home: • Measure with real telemetry – Using the OpenTelemetry Maven Extension and Jaeger, you can trace every goal and plugin, pinpoint slow modules, misconfigured tests, and unnecessary work. No more “it feels slow”; you get clear evidence of where time is lost. • Optimise test execution – By analysing traces and adjusting how tests run in parallel per module (instead of naïve global parallelism), the demo build dropped from 25s to 15s, proving that small, data-driven changes can deliver meaningful wins. • Use the Maven Daemon (mvnd) – mvnd keeps a warm JVM and project state, enabling highly parallel module builds while keeping logs readable and grouped per module, so you gain speed without drowning in interleaved output. • Fix your architecture, not just your flags – Clearer module boundaries and reduced cross-module coupling let Maven and mvnd exploit true parallelism, which matters even more in large mono-repos and complex platforms. • Leverage Maven Build Cache – With the Maven Build Cache Extension, only the parts that actually changed are rebuilt, artifacts can be shared across branches and environments, and full builds shrink to just a few seconds in realistic scenarios. Next step for me: introduce this stack—telemetry, smarter test strategy, mvnd, better modularisation, and build caching—into our pipelines to tighten feedback loops for both local development and CI. If your team still schedules coffee around mvn clean install, it’s time to rethink your build game. 🚀 #jfall #jfall2025 #maven #mavend 41 3 Comments Like Comment Share Copy LinkedIn Facebook X To view or add a comment, sign in VegaStack (PeerXP) 5,646 followers 2mo Report this post Spent months testing Backstage vs Port across different team sizes. Here's what actually matters for your developer portal decision: The fundamental trade-off: Control vs Convenience Backstage gives you unlimited customization but requires 2-3 months of dedicated engineering time plus ongoing maintenance. We're talking $50,000-$100,000 annually when you factor in engineer time and infrastructure costs. Port gets teams running in minutes with no-code configuration. Transparent pricing at $#0 per developer monthly with zero hidden costs. Key decision factors that actually matter: 1. Engineering bandwidth - Can you dedicate resources to building and maintaining infrastructure? 2. Timeline pressure - Need quick wins, or can you invest months for custom solutions? 3. Customization depth - Do you have truly unique workflows, or would standard processes work? 4. Adoption requirements - Will non-technical stakeholders need to use the portal? Bottom line: Most teams should start with Port for immediate value, then consider Backstage if customization needs to outgrow Port's capabilities. The biggest mistake we see? Teams choosing based on what sounds impressive rather than what fits their actual resources and timeline. What's your biggest challenge in choosing between developer portal platforms? Full comparison guide available in comments. 1 Comment Like Comment Share Copy LinkedIn Facebook X To view or add a comment, sign in Andrew Madu, BBA 2mo Report this post Even the best software won’t succeed if the people and processes aren’t ready. Successful adoption requires: Understanding organizational readiness. Identifying the right stakeholders & champions. Aligning tools with processes, not just installing software. Using data to build a credible business case . It’s a reminder that change isn’t just about tools—it’s about people and strategy. Case Study: Should I Pitch a New Project-Management System? hbr.org 3 Like Comment Share Copy LinkedIn Facebook X To view or add a comment, sign in Omotuwa Ojo 2mo Report this post https://lnkd.in/dUUFiRbg 🚀 Task Management System Technologies: React.js · Node.js · Express.js · MongoDB · Tailwind CSS (or your CSS stack, if you used another) The Task Management System is a full-stack web application designed to streamline task coordination, project tracking, and team collaboration within organizations. The platform provides role-based dashboards for Admins, Managers, and Users, ensuring efficient workflow management and accountability across all levels. 🔹 Key Features Role-Based Dashboards: Customized interfaces for Admins, Managers, and Users — each with tailored access and controls. Task and Project Management: Admins and Managers can create, assign, and share tasks or projects, monitor progress, and track deadlines in real time. Team Collaboration: Members can communicate through task comments, fostering smooth collaboration and instant feedback on ongoing work. Notifications System: Real-time notifications keep all team members updated on new tasks, comments, and status changes. User Management (Admin Panel): Admins can add or remove users and managers, update user details, and maintain complete control over the system’s operations. Access Control and Security: Each role has clearly defined permissions to ensure data integrity and secure operations. 💡 Outcome This project enhances productivity by centralizing project activities, enabling transparent communication, and simplifying task delegation. It’s ideal for organizations seeking an efficient, scalable, and user-friendly task coordination platform. Task Pulse taskpulse-hr3e.onrender.com 4 Like Comment Share Copy LinkedIn Facebook X To view or add a comment, sign in Buildkite 10,024 followers 2mo Report this post Last month we shipped updates that automate test triage, streamline merge queue builds, and add NuGet support for .NET teams (and a whole lot more): https://lnkd.in/gNbKPRcJ TL;DR: - Test Engine workflows automatically identify problematic tests and create issues in Linear. - Buildkite now handles GitHub merge queues natively, creating and canceling builds automatically based on merge group status. - Package Registries supports NuGet for .NET teams, offers flexible storage options, and integrates more easily with third-party systems. More big updates are on the way 💚 Changelog roundup: October '25 buildkite.com 8 1 Comment Like Comment Share Copy LinkedIn Facebook X To view or add a comment, sign in IT Revolution 9,964 followers 2mo Report this post Trust = (Competence + Reliability + Alignment) / Risk This is the trust equation that makes autonomy work. As teams demonstrate competence, reliability, and alignment, they earn more autonomy. But this only functions when the potential risk of independent action is manageable. GitHub can allow autonomous deployments because they've built systems that make individual deployments low-risk. Feature flags, automated testing, easy rollbacks. The trust isn't blind—it's backed by engineering practices that minimize the cost of mistakes. Most organizations approach this backward. They try to control risk through approval processes instead of through engineering practices. This creates false confidence while slowing everything down. The teams moving fastest aren't the ones with the fewest constraints. They're the ones with constraints in the right places. Learn where those places are: https://itrev.io/48PDd4d 1 Like Comment Share Copy LinkedIn Facebook X To view or add a comment, sign in Isaac Rowaiye 2mo Report this post Most engineers hit a wall in year 2 or 3. Not because they aren't smart. But because they stay stuck doing tasks. That was me. Tickets. Fixes. Deployments. All reactive. All short-term. Then I learned the single question that changed everything: 👉 "What part of our process can I make more reliable today?" That’s when I stopped being a task-doer… …and became a system-builder. → I automated the same manual deploy that broke 4 times → I built a Terraform template so new services took 30 mins, not 2 days → I created handoff docs so no one had to guess what came next Everything changed. Deployments got smoother. Collaboration got easier. Stress dropped—for everyone. The engineers who grow fastest aren’t just technical. They build systems the whole team can rely on. Start small. Pick one broken process. Fix it once, for everyone. That’s how you go from contributor to multiplier. 39 Like Comment Share Copy LinkedIn Facebook X To view or add a comment, sign in venkatesh prasad avineedi 2mo Report this post 📁 Have a large database of finalized IDEA StatiCa connections from past projects? Publishing each one manually just to reuse them later can be time-consuming. That’s why use the Publish API to automate the process: 🛠️ Bulk-publish completed connections in a single step 📦 Instantly make them available as approved templates 🔎 Use Propose to search, select, and apply them to new projects 🧾 Maintain consistency with version control and full traceability 💡This workflow is perfect for teams managing hundreds of archived connections—freeing up time and improving efficiency across future designs. 🎥 I recorded a quick video to show how it works …more 20 Like Comment Share Copy LinkedIn Facebook X To view or add a comment, sign in Matt Malloy 2mo Report this post Why do DER projects so often feel like a maze? Custom setups can create chaos and delays, with each developer submitting unique communication designs that require extensive review. powerWatch Execute replaces fragmented onboarding with a single, trackable workflow, minimizing miscommunication and delays. Say goodbye to endless back-and-forth and hello to predictable timelines and outcomes. Our clients have reported a 100% reduction in direct support requests from developers, allowing utilities to focus on their core operations. 2 Like Comment Share Copy LinkedIn Facebook X To view or add a comment, sign in 641 followers View Profile Connect Explore related topics How to Choose the Best Workflow Tools Establishing Workflow Ownership In Project Management Workflow Customization Techniques Explore content categories Career Productivity Finance Soft Skills & Emotional Intelligence Project Management Education Technology Leadership Ecommerce User Experience Show more Show less LinkedIn © 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines العربية (Arabic) বাংলা (Bangla) Čeština (Czech) Dansk (Danish) Deutsch (German) Ελληνικά (Greek) English (English) Español (Spanish) فارسی (Persian) Suomi (Finnish) Français (French) हिंदी (Hindi) Magyar (Hungarian) Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesian) Italiano (Italian) עברית (Hebrew) 日本語 (Japanese) 한국어 (Korean) मराठी (Marathi) Bahasa Malaysia (Malay) Nederlands (Dutch) Norsk (Norwegian) ਪੰਜਾਬੀ (Punjabi) Polski (Polish) Português (Portuguese) Română (Romanian) Русский (Russian) Svenska (Swedish) తెలుగు (Telugu) ภาษาไทย (Thai) Tagalog (Tagalog) Türkçe (Turkish) Українська (Ukrainian) Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese) 简体中文 (Chinese (Simplified)) 正體中文 (Chinese (Traditional)) Language Sign in to view more content Create your free account or sign in to continue your search Sign in Welcome back Email or phone Password Show Forgot password? 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https://blog.jetbrains.com/scala/ | IntelliJ Scala Plugin | The IntelliJ Scala Plugin Blog Skip to content Topics Search Language English 日本語 한국어 简体中文 Burger menu icon IDEs CLion DataGrip DataSpell Fleet GoLand IntelliJ IDEA PhpStorm PyCharm RustRover Rider RubyMine WebStorm Plugins & Services Big Data Tools Code With Me JetBrains Platform Scala Toolbox App Writerside JetBrains AI Grazie Junie JetBrains for Data Kineto Team Tools Datalore Space TeamCity Upsource YouTrack Hub Qodana CodeCanvas Matter .NET & Visual Studio .NET Tools ReSharper C++ Languages & Frameworks Kotlin Ktor MPS Amper Education & Research JetBrains Academy Research Company Company Blog Security Scala Plugin Scala Plugin for IntelliJ IDEA and Android Studio Follow Follow: X X RSS RSS Download All News Releases Features Promo image IntelliJ IDEA News releases scala IntelliJ Scala Plugin 2025.3 Is Out! Scala Plugin 2025.3 is out! - Support for Scala 3.8 - Better support for macros and export aliases, extension methods, and type lambdas - Structural Search and Replace Read article IntelliJ Scala Plugin 2025.2 Is Out! Scala Plugin 2025.2 is out! - Opaque types, named tuples, and new tuples operations are fully supported - The new layout for sbt modules is enabled by default - sbt-managed sources are regenerated on project reload - ScalaCLI now picks up new files without requiring a BSP refresh Maciej Gorywoda IntelliJ Scala Plugin 2025.1 Is Out! Scala Plugin 2025.1 is out! The update brings: - Support for the new syntax of context bounds and givens. - Improved handling of named tuples - A new action: "Generate sbt managed sources" - X-Ray hints for apply methods and all parameter names Maciej Gorywoda The IntelliJ Scala Plugin in 2024 The Year in Review Time flies. Only a year ago, we saw the release of Scala 3.4.0-RC1, and now we're trying out Scala 3.6.2 with many new experimental features. The last 12 months have brought many new features to the IntelliJ Scala Plugin as well. A year ago we introduced X-Ray mode, which lets … Maciej Gorywoda IntelliJ Scala Plugin 2024.3.20 Is Out! Scala Plugin 2024.3 is out with : -Support for transparent inline methods (experimental), named tuples, and opaque types -Better handling of Scala CLI projects -A new project model for sbt (beta) -AI multiline code completion Maciej Gorywoda New Module Layout for sbt Projects Try out the enhanced sbt integration with IntelliJ Scala Plugin 2024.3 We’re introducing a new mode that better represents the structure of sbt projects in IntelliJ IDEA by organizing main and test sources into separate modules. The improved layout resolves several issues with compilation and highlighting. It also allows using different compiler options for main and test sources. Aleksandra Zdrojowa IntelliJ Scala Plugin 2024.3 Is Out! Scala Plugin 2024.3 is out with : -Support for transparent inline methods (experimental), named tuples, and opaque types -Better handling of Scala CLI projects -A new project model for sbt (beta) -AI multiline code completion Maciej Gorywoda IntelliJ Scala Plugin 2024.2 Is Out! Scala Plugin 2024.2 is out with: - Better support for the “fewer braces” syntax in for-comprehensions - Enum cases included in import suggestions - Enum cases suggested in code completion - Improved CBH performance - Onboarding tips for new projects Maciej Gorywoda JetBrains Joins the Scala Center Advisory Board! JetBrains has been contributing to the Scala ecosystem for a very long time. We’ve sponsored many Scala conferences around the world and participated in various open-source Scala projects. Our most significant contribution is the Scala Plugin for IntelliJ IDEA, with which we aspire to provide the be… Dmitrii Naumenko IntelliJ Scala Plugin 2024.1 Is Out! It is nigh impossible to compare how much work goes into different releases of IntelliJ Scala Plugin (just as it is with any software). Sometimes, a lot of work results in only a small number of visible changes, while at the same time, it lays out the foundations for many more improvements in the ne… Maciej Gorywoda The Functional Programming in Scala Course Is Out! Over the last year, the JetBrains Education and Research team has been working on a new Scala course for JetBrains Academy. This new course assumes prior knowledge of Scala basics and focuses on the functional programming concepts that Scala can simplify rather than language syntax. To get going wit… Maciej Gorywoda The X-Ray Mode IntelliJ IDEA allows for displaying useful information directly in the editor, next to the code, in the form of inlay hints, that is, text that is slightly different from the actual code, but similar enough to be effortlessly read together with it. You can think of it as augmented code. Yo… Maciej Gorywoda IntelliJ Scala Plugin 2023.3 Is Out! Scala 3 As usual, the new release focused much on improving the Scala 3 support. Especially enums received much attention. The Scala plugin now recognizes that enums cannot be extended and highlights such attempts; annotations and modifiers are now propagated correctly to generated symbols; type… Maciej Gorywoda Load more Privacy & Security Terms of Use Legal Genuine tools Language English 日本語 한국어 简体中文 Twitter Facebook Linkedin Instagram Youtube RSS Tiktok Merchandise store icon Merchandise store Copyright © 2000 JetBrains s.r.o. | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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Right menu Anthropic Discloses First AI-Orchestrated Cyber Espionage Campaign Shashwat Ghosh Shashwat Ghosh Shashwat Ghosh Follow Dec 3 '25 Anthropic Discloses First AI-Orchestrated Cyber Espionage Campaign # ai # cybersecurity # technology # machinelearning Comments Add Comment 5 min read Your AI Morning Brew: 7 Major AI Developments You Missed This Week (December 2025) Ethan Zhang Ethan Zhang Ethan Zhang Follow Dec 22 '25 Your AI Morning Brew: 7 Major AI Developments You Missed This Week (December 2025) # news # ai # technology # chatgpt 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 5 min read I Built My DevOps Portfolio on a Killercoda Ubuntu Playground — And It Transformed My Learning mike mike mike Follow Nov 25 '25 I Built My DevOps Portfolio on a Killercoda Ubuntu Playground — And It Transformed My Learning # ubuntu # linux # cloud # technology 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 1 min read Predictions for AI Developments by the End of 2027 Hemanth Suresh Hemanth Suresh Hemanth Suresh Follow Nov 29 '25 Predictions for AI Developments by the End of 2027 # ai # machinelearning # predictions # technology 1 reaction Comments Add Comment 4 min read Embedded Systems & Electronics in 2025: Key Trends and What Really Changed Danie Brooks Danie Brooks Danie Brooks Follow Nov 17 '25 Embedded Systems & Electronics in 2025: Key Trends and What Really Changed # embedded # ips # ai # technology Comments Add Comment 4 min read Level Up Your Web Design: A Beginner's Guide to Framer Motion & GSAP karthikeyan karthikeyan karthikeyan Follow Nov 17 '25 Level Up Your Web Design: A Beginner's Guide to Framer Motion & GSAP # technology # programming # ai Comments Add Comment 3 min read Is Coding Dying? 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https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_86 | January 2024 (version 1.86) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. 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Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the January 2024 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Per-window zoom levels - Adjust the zoom level for each window independently. Hey Code voice command - Start a chat session with a voice command. Multi-file diff editor - Quickly review diffs across multiple files in the diff editor. Triggered breakpoints - Efficient debugging with breakpoint dependencies. Expanded Sticky Scroll support - Sticky Scroll in tree views and notebooks. Markdown paste options - Rich paste support for links, video, and audio elements. Flexible Auto Save options - Skip Auto Save on errors or save only for specific file types. Source Control input - Customize commit input and per-language editor settings. Extension notifications - Fine-grained control for disabling notifications per extension. GitHub Copilot updates - Improved default context, add file as context, AI fixes. If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Accessibility Alerts Screen reader and braille users now have more configurable alerts, such as when debug breakpoints are hit, if there are errors on the current line, and more. These can be configured via settings starting with accessibility.alert , or explored and configured with the Help: List Alerts command. Use "Hey Code" voice command With the new accessibility.voice.keywordActivation setting, you can enable VS Code to listen for the "Hey Code" voice command to start a voice session with Copilot Chat. The voice recognition is computed locally on your machine and is never sent to any server. Available options are: chatInView : start voice chat from the Chat view quickChat : start quick voice chat from the Quick Chat control inlineChat : start voice chat from inline chat in the editor chatInContext : start voice from inline chat if the focus is in the editor, otherwise voice chat from the Chat view The following example shows "Hey Code" with the inlineChat option configured: A small microphone icon in the Status Bar signals when VS Code is using the microphone for recognizing "Hey Code". Once the voice chat session is completed, VS Code will again listen to "Hey Code" to start it again. To use this new capability, the following extensions are required: GitHub Copilot Chat VS Code Speech Note: the voice recognition runs locally on your machine and is never sent to any server. Workbench Restore auxiliary windows With this release, all opened floating window associated with a main window will restore when you restart the application. This includes opened editors, and size and location of the auxiliary window. Sticky Scroll in tree views Building on the success of Sticky Scroll in the editor, we've extended this feature to all tree views, enabling users to more easily navigate project trees. Sticky Scroll for tree views can be enabled or disabled with the workbench.tree.enableStickyScroll setting. To ensure Sticky Scroll does not take too much space, it is limited to maximum 40% of the view height. Additionally, users can customize the maximum number of sticky elements by configuring workbench.tree.stickyScrollMaxItemCount , which is set to 7 by default. If there are more sticky elements than can be displayed, Sticky Scroll will consolidate the last sticky elements together, if the tree view supports this feature. For an improved tree navigation experience, you can select a sticky element to jump directly to the element within the tree. Alternately, press the chevron of a parent element to hide all its child elements. Additionally, accessing checkboxes and action items is easier when Sticky Scroll is enabled. Configure zoom levels per window The new setting window.zoomPerWindow , which is enabled by default, lets you configure the zoom commands ( Zoom In , Zoom Out , Zoom Reset ) to apply only to the active window, and not to all opened windows. Previously using these commands would not only apply it to all opened windows, but would also update the window.zoomLevel setting. We believe that using these commands is more of an ad-hoc gesture, for example when giving a presentation, and thus should only apply to the window they are invoked from. As you can see from this example, only the active window's zoom level changes, but not for the other window: A zoom level indicator is shown in the Status Bar when the custom zoom level of a window does not match the window.zoomLevel setting value. Select the Status Bar indicator to find controls to change zoom levels, reset the zoom level, or quickly go to the related settings. A window with custom zoom level retains that zoom level across restarts and across workspace changes. Note: configure window.zoomPerWindow to false to restore the previous zoom level behavior. More powerful and flexible Auto Save options VS Code offered Auto Save options for a long time. In this release, we make this capability a lot more powerful. Configure Auto Save per resource or language All Auto Save settings can now be configured per folder or language, which lets you selectively enable Auto Save only for specific languages or folders. In the example below, settings are configured as: { "[markdown]" : { "files.autoSave" : "afterDelay" } } As you can see, the edited markdown file saves immediately, while the TypeScript file remains dirty. Disable Auto Save when errors A new files.autoSaveWhenNoErrors setting lets you disable Auto Save if there are error markers in the file when Auto Save would normally save the editor. This can be useful when you have external tools watching for file changes, where you want to avoid that these tools act on a changed file that contains errors. Auto Save for workspace files only Finally, a new setting files.autoSaveWorkspaceFilesOnly that limits Auto Save only to files that are inside the workspace. Allow disabling notifications per extension We now offer more fine-grained control for disabling notifications coming from extensions. From a notification toast, you can disable notifications for the extension: In the Notification Center, there is a central place to manage notification enablement for all extensions that have triggered a notification: This new feature complements our existing Do Not Disturb Mode, which globally disables all notifications. As with the global switch, error notifications will always appear and cannot be disabled. Allow swapping left and right diff editors When you compare two files (for example from the File Explorer), a new action appears to swap the left and right hand side of the diff editor. Note: comparing two editable files allows you to make changes on either side. Do no enforce --wait when reading from stdin from the command line When using a terminal, you can pass the output of a process directly into VS Code to open as editor, for example: ps aux | grep code | code - on Linux or macOS echo Hello World | code - on Windows Until now, this also implied the --wait flag, which means that you would not get back to the terminal prompt until you had either closed the editor window or VS Code entirely. In this milestone, we no longer enforce --wait when reading from stdin, so you immediately get back to the terminal prompt. Note: to get the previous behavior back, simply append --wait to the command line invocation. Support custom title bar with native title bar We're introducing the window.customTitleBarVisibility setting, which allows showing the custom title bar even when the native title bar is being used. This is especially beneficial for macOS users that prefer native tabs. With this new setting, native title bar users can now access custom title bar functionalities, such as: Command Center: Easily access the command center directly from the custom title bar. Layout Controls: Customize your workspace layout with greater flexibility. Activity Bar Customization: Move the Activity Bar actions to the top. Editor Actions Customization: Relocate editor actions to the custom title bar. Moreover, for users who prefer an uncluttered view in full-screen mode, the window.customTitleBarVisibility: "windowed" option allows you to hide the custom title bar when in full-screen mode. This feature ensures a more focused and distraction-free coding environment, while still providing the option to use custom title bar features when you're not in full-screen mode. New setting to enforce system color theme A new setting window.systemColorTheme lets you explicitly override the system color theme that applies to native elements in VS Code, such as the menu or dialogs on macOS. The setting supports the following values: default : the color theme matches that of the operating system (default option). auto : pick light or dark , depending on the VS Code theme light : pick light system theme dark : pick dark system theme Below is an example of how this applies to the macOS context menus, showing light in the top part, and dark in the bottom part: Allow closing untitled workspaces without confirmation A new setting window.confirmSaveUntitledWorkspace lets you disable showing a confirmation dialog when closing a window with an untitled workspace. There's now also a checkbox on the dialog to disable showing it. The window.confirmSaveUntitledWorkspace setting is enabled by default to keep the current behavior. Note: learn more about untitled workspaces in our documentation . Toggle Word Wrap in Output panel The Output panel now supports toggling word wrap by using the View: Toggle Word Wrap command. This is useful for viewing long lines of text in the Output panel. Open Output panel in a new window The Output panel now has an Open Output in New Window action in the panel title menu to view the Output panel in a separate window. Update Extensions from CLI You can now update extensions from the command line by using the --update-extensions argument. This will update all installed extensions to their latest version. Hovers in the Quick Pick now use custom hovers We've moved several hovers in the Quick Pick over to using custom hovers instead of native rendering. This allows for richer rendering & more consistency across the product. Review multiple files in diff editor With this release, the multi diff editor is now enabled for all users. The multi diff editor lets you view changes across multiple files in one scrollable view: Currently the multi diff editor can be used to review local changes, staged changes, incoming/outgoing changes, stashes, and changes from pull requests. It can be opened by selecting the various new View Changes actions, which can be recognized by the multi file diff icon. When the diff editor is opened from the Source Control view, it dynamically updates the view as files become changed or staged. The multi diff editor is still under development, so expect to see more improvements and bug-fixes in the coming releases. Multi-file diffs in the GitHub Pull Requests extension When the GitHub Pull Requests and Issues extension is installed, you can set "githubPullRequests.focusedMode": "multiDiff" to automatically open the multi-file diff editor when opening a pull request. When you're set up for github.dev , you can press . on a pull request on GitHub and github.dev opens with the multi-file diff editor to review the changes. Editor Paste text/html content The Paste As... command now lets you paste text/html content in the clipboard: When you copy content from a web page for example, you can use this to paste the content's HTML instead of pasting it as plain text: Source Control Commit input customizations This milestone we have added a new setting, scm.inputMinLineCount , that can be used to control the initial height of the commit input field. The setting that controls the maximum size of the commit input field has been renamed from scm.inputMaxLines to scm.inputMaxLineCount so that it matches the naming convention of similar settings. Users can now use language-specific editor settings to further customize the commit input field. Language-specific editor settings can be used to define editor rules and disable word wrapping: "[scminput]" : { "editor.rulers" : [ 50 , 72 ], "editor.wordWrap" : "off" } Source Control Repositories view improvements To help manage workspaces with large number of repositories better, we have added a new command to the repository context menu: Close Other Repositories . We have also added multi-selection support for both the Close Repository and Close Other Repositories commands, so users can close multiple repositories at once, or close all repositories except for a few. The Source Control Repositories view can get crowded because of actions that are contributed by extensions. To help with this, we have added the ability to hide contributed actions by right clicking on the action and choosing Hide . The hidden actions are moved into the ... menu. All actions, except the Checkout and Sync can be hidden. Incoming/Outgoing changes improvements We continue to polish the incoming/outgoing changes section in the Source Control view. This milestone, we made changes so that the Incoming changes node is only shown if the current branch has a tracking remote branch. We have added Fetch and Pull actions to the Incoming changes node, and Push action to the Outgoing changes node. We have added actions to view each individual commit, and all the incoming/outgoing changes that leverage the multi-file diff editor. Users can now use a new setting, scm.showChangesSummary , to hide the All Changes entry. Ability to merge tags We have addressed a long-standing feature request by adding the capability to merge tags. A new command is added to the command palette, Git: Merge... that replaces the Git: Merge Branch... command. Invoking the Git: Merge... command will display a quick pick control that lists both branches and tags. View Stash command We have added a new command, Git: View Stash... , that enables users to view any stash from the repository in the multi-file diff editor. When viewing a git stash, the editor title menu will contain actions to apply/pop, or drop the stash. Commit signing using SSH keys This milestone we have added the capability to sign commits using an SSH key with a passphrase. When signing a commit with the SSH key, VS Code will display a quick pick control at the top of the screen to prompt for the passphrase. VS Code does not cache the passphrase and will prompt for it each time a commit is signed. Notebooks Floating window support Notebook editors can now be opened in a floating window. You can drag the notebook tab out of the main window to open it in a new window, or use the View: Move Editor into New Window command. Built-in variable view We have added an experimental variable view to the Run and Debug view that can be used to view variables from a notebook kernel, if the extension provides them. This functionality can be enabled with this setting: "notebook.experimental.variablesView" : true Notebook Sticky Scroll The notebook editor's Sticky Scroll feature has received significant polishing to align its style with the rest of the workbench, and to add folding controls to each markdown element. Terminal Background shown under selection When GPU acceleration is enabled, cells with non-default background colors will now be rendered "underneath" the regular selection color. Zoom terminal via mouse wheel The terminal can now be zoomed in and out with the mouse wheel while holding Ctrl , when enabled with this setting: "terminal.integrated.mouseWheelZoom" : true Multi-line paste warning improvements In previous versions, terminal.integrated.enableMultiLinePasteWarning accepted either true (default) or false . When true was active, it would always show the warning, except when either bracketed paste mode is enabled or the line ends in a \n character. This setting now accepts a string with the following options: auto : Previous true behavior always : Always show a warning never : Never show a warning Additionally, there is a new button in the dialog to paste the string as a single line, which removes all \r and \n characters. Link improvements File protocol URIs ( file:// ) now support line and column number extensions at the end, like most other links. The new #<line> format is also supported. Terminal voice commands The new Terminal: Start Terminal Voice and Terminal: Stop Terminal Voice commands enable speech-to-text sessions in the terminal. To use this new capability, install the VS Code Speech extension. Tasks Shorthand for path separator variable The new ${/} variable can be used as a shorthand for the existing ${pathSeparator} variable. Debug Triggered breakpoints You can now set breakpoints that are automatically enabled once another breakpoint is hit. For example, this can be useful when diagnosing failure cases in code that happen only after a certain precondition. Triggered breakpoints work for all languages, and conditional breakpoints might also be used as the trigger. Triggered breakpoints can be set by right-clicking on the glyph margin, selecting Add Triggered Breakpoint... , and then choosing which other breakpoint enables this breakpoint. Theme: Codesong (preview on vscode.dev ) Close readonly files when a session ends When attached to a debugger, there can be internal or virtual source files that don't exist on-disk, which are opened as readonly. There is a new setting, debug.closeReadonlyTabsOnEnd , that causes VS Code to automatically close any opened readonly files from the debug session when the session ends. Testing More ways to run tests Holding Alt while clicking on a test decoration, now runs that test in debug mode, when available. There are now context menu actions in the Explorer view, which can be used to run all tests declared in a file or folder. Finalized TestRunProfile.isDefault/onDidChangeDefault APIs for extension authors Previously, TestRunProfile.isDefault only controlled the initial default state of a test run profile, and it was never changed or read after that point. In this release, users changing their selected profiles will be reflected in the TestRunProfile.isDefault property and fire a corresponding TestRunProfile.onDidChangeDefault event. Likewise, when extensions change isDefault , this will cause the selected profiles in the UI to update. Languages Paste a URL to automatically create a Markdown link Want to turn that link you copied into a Markdown link? When you paste a URL into a Markdown file with text selected, VS Code now automatically inserts a Markdown link: This feature is controlled by the markdown.editor.pasteUrlAsFormattedLink.enabled setting. You can change it to customize this behavior: smartWithSelection — The default. This enables the feature when you have selected text and are not inside a special element, such as a code block. smart — Same as smartWithSelection but does not require a selection. always — Always paste urls as a Markdown links never — Disable pasting as Markdown links. After you've pasted a value, you can always switch to paste the content in a different way by using the Paste control. Configure audio/video snippets for Markdown The new markdown.editor.filePaste.audioSnippet and markdown.editor.filePaste.videoSnippet settings let you customize how audio and video files are inserted into Markdown on drop or paste. The snippet can use the following variables: ${src} — The resolved path of the audio/video file. ${title} — The title used for the audio/video. A snippet placeholder will automatically be created for this variable. New Less grammar The previous Less grammar has been archived and VS Code now uses the grammar from Better-Less for Less syntax highlighting. New Go grammar The Go syntax highlighting grammar has been changed to use Go Syntax , which is more actively maintained than the previous grammar. Remote Development The Remote Development extensions , allow you to use a Dev Container , remote machine via SSH or Remote Tunnels , or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. Highlights include: Create a devcontainer.json in your user data folder. Specify build options in devcontainer.json when using a Dockerfile. You can learn more about these features in the Remote Development release notes . Contributions to extensions GitHub Copilot It is now possible to change the font family of the inline suggestions by using the setting editor.inlineSuggest.fontFamily . Confirm inline chat before saving We emphasize responsible usage of AI, especially when it comes to source code. Therefore, we have added a new setting that asks users for confirmation before saving code that was generated by Copilot. This setting, inlineChat.acceptedOrDiscardBeforeSave , is enabled by default. Theme: GitHub Light Default (preview on vscode.dev ) When the setting is enabled, a file save will wait for the user to Accept or Discard any pending inline chat session. This also applies when Auto Save is enabled, which will be temporarily disabled until inline chat has ended. Hold to Speak mode A little while back, we added speech support to VS Code. Install the VS Code Speech extension, which adds speech-to-text support for Chat input fields. For inline chat we have now added "hold to speak", which works as follows: Press Cmd+I or Ctrl+I to trigger inline chat. Hold the keys pressed and notice how voice recording automatically starts. Release the keys to stop recording and send your request to Copilot. Theme: GitHub Light Default (preview on vscode.dev ) This new mode also comes with a setting, which is enabled by default, but can be disabled with inlineChat.holdToSpeech . Preview: Inline Chat Quick Voice In addition to "hold to speak", we are experimenting with a lighter alternative UI for this functionality. Activate Quick Voice by pressing Cmd+K or Ctrl+K and then holding I . While holding I , a more lightweight recording UI is shown. Upon release, the request is sent. Inline Chat Live Mode The past release had a new experimental inline chat mode, called live3 . It provides a smoother streaming experience and easier to digest diff view. This has now graduated and replaced the former live -mode. The default is still livePreview , but we encourage users to try out live . We are also running an experiment to learn which mode works best. Light bulb for AI fixes (sparkle) To invoke Copilot, you can also use the light bulb indicator in the editor. Make a selection or move the cursor to a new line, select the light bulb, and then select Modify with Copilot or Generate with Copilot . If there are no other code actions, the light bulb shows as a sparkle and will directly open inline chat. #file context variable There are a few context variables that you can already use by typing # in the chat input, and we've added #file to let you include a specified file in your workspace as context with your chat prompt. Pick #file from the suggestion control in the input, and then select a file from the Quick Pick that appears. If possible, the full contents of the file will be included. If that is too large to fit into the context window, an outline of the file will be included that includes functions and their descriptions without implementations. If the outline is also too large, then the file won't be part of the prompt. Default context in chat Previously, we would include two types of context from the active code editor with your chat requests by default: If there was a text selection, then the selection would be included And if there was no selection, then the range of code in the visible viewport of the active editor would be included We've found that the second type can lead to confusion when you want to ask a generic question, but the LLM interprets it as a question about the code in your editor that was included as context. We are experimenting with not including code in the viewport by default, but only including code that is selected. Of course, you will often want to ask about the code you can see in your editor, so we've added a new context variable, #editor . Added "Clear All Workspace Chats" command Each time you use the + button to start a new chat, your previous chat is stored in your workspace chat history, which you can access by using the clock icon in the header of the Chat view. We've added the Clear All Workspace Chats command to clear all of your past chat history for convenience. Commit message language The code to generate git commit messages now uses the github.copilot.chat.localeOverride setting to generate commit messages in a specific language. Ask for Additional permissions for private repositories To enable additional workspace search features for private repositories, we require additional permissions. If we detect that we don't have these permissions already, we will ask for them at startup. Once granted, we'll securely store the session for the future. Python Python Debugger extension installed by default The Python Debugger extension is now installed by default alongside the Python extension. The Python Debugger extension aims to separate the debugging functionality from the main Python extension to prevent compatibility issues. This ensures that even as the Python extension drops support for older Python versions (for example, Python 3.7), you can continue debugging projects with those versions without downgrading your Python extension. It also delivers platform-specific builds, ensuring you only receive the components relevant to your specific operating system, reducing download times and unnecessary overhead. This new extension replicates all the functionality available in the main Python extension, and more. To ensure you are using the new Python Debugger extension, replace "type": "python" with "type": "debugpy" from your launch.json configuration file. In the future, the Python extension will no longer offer debugging support, and we will transition all debugging support to the Python Debugger extension for all debugging functionality. Create Environment option in the Python interpreter quick pick You can now more conveniently create a Python environment from the Python interpreter Quick Pick. Run the Python: Select Interpreter command, and then select the Create Environment option to create a new virtual environment for your project. Theme: Catppuccin Mocha (preview on vscode.dev ) Improved display for workspace conda environments The Python interpreter Quick Pick now displays the name of conda environments located in the workspace, to make it easier to identify them. Support for multi-level pytest classes When using multi-level pytest classes, the top-level class is now displayed in the Test Explorer. Previously, only the lower level classes were displayed. Theme: Catppuccin Mocha (preview on vscode.dev ) Jupyter Finalized Jupyter Kernel Execution API for extension authors The Jupyter extension's API for executing code against Jupyter kernels has been finalized. Extensions can use the API to execute code against kernels. Examples of API usage can be found in the Jupyter Kernel Execution Sample . The npm package @vscode/jupyter-extension contains all the TypeScript type definitions. When an extension attempts to access a Jupyter kernel, the user is prompted to grant or revoke access to the kernels. Access to Jupyter kernels is granted by the user per extension. This means that the user can grant access to extension A , and revoke access to extension B . Users can manage (grant/revoke) access to the Jupyter kernels per extension via the command Jupyter: Manage Access To Jupyter Kernels . GitHub Pull Requests and Issues There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests and Issues extension, which allows you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. New features include: Resolving conflicts for the currently checked out PR. A groupBy property for issue queries. Clicking permalinks in a checked out PR will open the file in the editor. Hovering on comment reactions shows who reacted. Setting "githubPullRequests.focusedMode": "multiDiff" will open the multi-diff editor with all the files in the PR upon checkout. Review the changelog for the 0.80.0 release of the extension to learn about the other highlights. Preview Features TypeScript 5.4 beta support We now support the beta release of TypeScript 5.4. Check out the TypeScript 5.4 beta blog post and iteration plan for details on this release. Highlights include: Initial work on AI-powered refactorings. A new NoInfer intrinsic that can help library and types authors stop incorrect type inference. Improvements to type refinements and type checking. To start using the TypeScript 5.4 beta, just install the TypeScript Nightly extension . Please share feedback and let us know if you run into any bugs with TypeScript 5.4. Quick Search Improvements In version 1.82, we introduced Quick Access Text Search ("Quick Search") , which allows users to search from a picker. 🔎 Quick Search now has the following features: Editor preview on active pick. See the result in the context of the editor as you browse. Easier navigation from Quick Search to the Search view. Select the button next to the input or a result to transfer the results to the Search view. Theme: Night Owl (preview on vscode.dev ) Proposed APIs Every milestone comes with new proposed APIs and extension authors can try them out. As always, we want your feedback. Here are the steps to try out a proposed API: Find a proposal that you want to try and add its name to package.json#enabledApiProposals . Use the latest @vscode/dts and run npx @vscode/dts dev . It will download the corresponding d.ts files into your workspace. You can now program against the proposal. You cannot publish an extension that uses a proposed API. There may be breaking changes in the next release and we never want to break existing extensions. Test Coverage API This milestone, the test coverage's API and in-editor experience have reached feature-complete state. We encourage extension authors to try them out and provide feedback prior to their forecasted finalization in the VS Code 1.87 release. While the API is too lengthy to include here, we believe it to be fairly straightforward, and would welcome your input on the proposal in issue #123713 . Chat Agent API We've been working on an API to enable extension authors to contribute their own chat agents to the Chat view in VS Code. We've made a few changes to the API, including: The history context passed to the chat agent now properly represents which chat agent and command was invoked by a given message, the values of variables in history messages, and what the result was. ChatAgentTask has been removed, and it's now possible to use ChatProgressMessage in the middle of the response stream to cover the same scenario. All "slashCommand"-related terms have been renamed to "subCommand". If you'd like to try out the API, you can start with our sample chat agent extension , and subscribe to issue #199908 for updates to the API. Code Action Highlights API For refactorings such as Extract method or Move to file, it's not always clear what code the action will apply to. This is especially true for languages like TypeScript that try to intelligently expand the user's current selection. This API allows code actions to provide one or potentially many ranges ( Range[] ) that they will apply to. The range will be highlighted as the user hovers or arrows through the Code Action list. For refactorings, this range would be the code in the current file that will be affected by the refactoring. For Quick Fixes, you could highlight the related diagnostics. This is already done in Quick Fixes that are invoked from editor.codeActionWidget.includeNearbyQuickFixes . Issue Reporter API Small additions to the proposed API, which allow both IssueUriRequestHandler and IssueDataProvider to be used together. Also improvements for the vscode.commands.openIssueReporter command, which can now contribute additional extension data and modify the URL of where the GitHub issue is directed to. Subscribe to issue #197863 for updates or changes to the API and openIssueReporter command. Comment reaction reactor API The CommentReaction interface has a new reactors property, so that extensions can indicate who reacted to a comment. These reactors are currently displayed in the hover of a comment reaction. See issue #201131 to track progress on this API. Finalized APIs New workspace.save and workspace.saveAs APIs The new finalized APIs workspace.save and workspace.saveAs allow extensions to trigger the flow of saving an editor, either to its resource, or by asking the user to provide a resource. All methods for saving return the resulting Uri , or undefined if the operation was canceled. Untitled files will always ask the user for a destination, unless a path is already associated. Readonly message for FileSystemProvider API When registering a FileSystemProvider with registerFileSystemProvider , the options can be set to mark the entire file system as readonly. Now, if the isReadonly option is set to a MarkdownString , then that message will be shown in the editor when the user tries to edit the file in the filesystem. Engineering Housekeeping In early December we went through our annual housekeeping. We achieved a net-reduction of 1891 issues across our repositories. The following chart nicely illustrates the need for and the impact of our annual house keeping iteration. Markdown Language Service 0.4 release The Markdown Language Service package powers VS Code's built-in Markdown support. The new 0.4 release bundles a number of improvements we've made over the past half year, which other tooling and editors can benefit from. These are some of the highlights: Enable document links, references, and rename for HTML fragments in Markdown. Fix potential catastrophic back-tracking in a regular expression. Avoid adding extra encoding on completions. Use fuzzy matching for workspace symbol search. Fix a number of cases around link detection/validation. New localize2 function to make crafting ILocalizedString s more easily In VS Code's core codebase, we use a type called ILocalizedString to render both a localized and an English string next to each other. You might have seen this if you use a language pack and you open the Command Palette. Previously, we had to write these expressions like: const str = { value: localize ( 'id' , 'Hello World' ), original: 'Hello World' }; This can now be expressed as follows: const str = localize2 ( 'id' , 'Hello World' ); Our localization pipeline will then pick up these localize2 occurrences. Electron 27 update In this milestone, we are promoting the Electron 27 update to users on our stable release. This update comes with Chromium 118.0.5993.159 and Node.js 18.17.1. We want to thank everyone who self-hosted on Insiders builds and provided early feedback. Linux minimum requirements update In this milestone, we have updated the toolchains to build our desktop client. From this release onwards, VS Code desktop is only compatible with Linux distributions based on glibc 2.28 or later, and glibcxx 3.4.25 or later, such as Debian 10, RHEL 8, or Ubuntu 20.04. If you are unable to upgrade your Linux distribution, the recommended alternative is to use our web client . If you would like to use the desktop version, then you can download the VS Code release 1.85 . Depending on your platform, make sure to disable updates to stay on that version. A good recommendation is to set up the installation with Portable Mode . Notable fixes Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @starball5 (starball) @RedCMD (RedCMD) @okineadev (Okinea Dev) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @a-stewart (Anthony Stewart) Fire an input event on editor.action.clipboardPasteAction PR #198822 Log extensionLocation not location in error message of getCustomBuiltinExtensionsFromLocations PR #200748 @Ajaykumbhare (Ajay Kumbhare) : fix: terminal renaming not functioning as expected in editor area PR #202270 @andrewbranch (Andrew Branch) : Fix preferTypeOnlyAutoImports preference getter PR #201376 @aramikuto (Aleksandr Kondrashov) : Update IExplorerView interface PR #201992 @audreygao (Audrey Ya Gao) : Fix #193468 - Fix bug with error notification when pressing "l" on non-expandable reference item. PR #199996 @bricker (Bryan Ricker) : doc typo fix PR #202429 @callumok2004 (Callum OKane) : Add bun.lockb to default file nesting under package.json PR #201065 @CGNonofr (Loïc Mangeonjean) : Take into account models created beforehand PR #199652 @chartrandf (Francis Chartrand) : timeline: use follow option so timeline follow file beyond renames PR #187174 @conwnet (netcon) : fix: workbench.editorAssociations not work in workbench configurationDefaults PR #194087 @cpendery (Chapman Pendery) fix: terminal suggestion positioning PR #199420 fix: accepting terminal completions cursor positions PR #199706 build: enable suggestions when 'shellIntegration.suggestEnabled' is true PR #199821 refactor: xterm suggestion addon into terminalContrib PR #200107 @DiscreteTom (DiscreteTom) : fix #193746 PR #197523 @effectivecui : avoid to enter the infinite loop when item.children is empty. PR #201701 @Flanker32 (Hanxiao Liu) : Update java workspace tags PR #197729 @gayanper (Gayan Perera) : Add support for breakpoint dependencies PR #166202 @GenericTSDeveloper : Fixed issue Misalignment of suggestion details widget (https://github.com/microsoft/monaco-editor/issues/3373) PR #198730 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) Implement keyboard navigation between list find/filter matches PR #180078 Preserve sort order when filtering Git branch / tag quickpicks (fix #199471) PR #199473 Git: Merge Branch... picker duplicates branch name in description (fix #199562) PR #199742 Fix Customize Layout bugs related to Activity Bar (fix #200571) PR #200572 @gregvanl (Greg Van Liew) : Add missing commas PR #201137 @harbin1053020115 (ermin.zem) : fix: select theme according to current color theme in dev mode PR #190035 @hsfzxjy (Xie Jingyi) : Defer onDidStyleChange to Repl being visible PR #200473 @iisaduan (Isabel Duan) : fix typescript/54492: check if file rename changes extension PR #200220 @impressivewebs (Louis Lazaris) Fixed some CSS terminology PR #202125 Corrected CSS Hover Documentation text PR #202142 @irgendwr (Jonas Bögle) : Add: "Close Other Repositories" in git scm menu PR #130931 @jacekkopecky (Jacek Kopecký) : Fixes #198566: ellipsize left-cut search preview PR #198567 @jaraco (Jason R. Coombs) : Add support for extracting environment from xonsh. PR #201036 @jeanp413 (Jean Pierre) Fix vscode.tasks.executeTask error Unexpected: Task does not exist after task.terminate() PR #200872 Fix single tab context menu actions sometimes don't work PR #201021 Fix task progress indicator does not appear after the first time PR #201064 Fix single terminal tab rename action does not work PR #201128 @johnsoncodehk (Johnson Chu) : Fix optionalReplacementSpan not being applied to completion entries PR #200945 @JoyceGu (Joyce Gu) : add JS Vector DB libraries PR #199980 @jtbandes (Jacob Bandes-Storch) : Update Swift.tmLanguage PR #200698 @keerthivasansa (Keerthi Vasan S A) : Workbench actions for Tree Fuzzy Search Toggle PR #175137 @khreenberg (Kim Reenberg) : fix: fallback to strings for non-executable libc.so.6 PR #202581 @kkocdko (kkocdko) : Fix platform detection after Node.js 21 PR #200935 @ksg97031 (KSG) : docs: Fix typos in description of multiple argument for Go To commands PR #201122 @Leask (Sixia "Leask" Huang) : fix: tweak check-requirements for calling ldconfig PR #202645 @loganrosen (Logan Rosen) : Update Stack Overflow tag in CONTRIBUTING.md PR #126199 @mahmoudsalah1993 (Mahmoud Salah) : For open diff editors, resolve the underlying original editor to set … PR #201597 @Malix-off (Malix) : Remove unused import in extensions/git/src/api/git.d.ts PR #200797 @marrej (Marcus Revaj) : # Fix dropping of partialAccepts PR #199663 @MaxBR97 : Added scm.inputMinLines configuration PR #200551 @mohammadamin16 (Mohammad Amin) : debug: close read-only tabs on end debug session PR #199898 @mrienstra (Michael Rienstra) : docs: document new configuration.markdown.copyFiles.destination options PR #203391 @MrJithil (Jithil P Ponnan) : chore: replace deprecated octal escape sequences with hex PR #197518 @ngarside (Nathan Garside) : Add syntax highlighting for *.repo files PR #199859 @nrayburn-tech (Nicholas Rayburn) : npm extension - check for root package.json before findFiles PR #124803 @poeck (Paul Köck) : chore: update copyright year PR #202344 @r3m0t (Tomer Chachamu) : Wait for paste to finish in paste command (fixes #196161) PR #196516 @RedCMD (RedCMD) Change lowercase l to uppercase L . asp-vb-net.tmLanguage.json PR #201981 onDidChangeEmmiter fires constantly when it shouldn't PR #202198 @remcohaszing (Remco Haszing) : Remove bigNumbersDelta PR #194712 @RobbyCBennett (Robby Bennett) : make gotoErrorWidget styling of relatedInformation more consistent with that of markerHoverParticipant PR #195409 @robertohuertasm (Roberto Huertas) : feat(stash): return the stash result PR #177732 @ronakj (Ronak Jain) : Fix tsserver crashing when using custom node path PR #201966 @russelldavis (Russell Davis) : Fix race condition with restoration of problems when closing a file PR #183271 @samhanic : [CLI] extension update command PR #199893 @shubhisroking (Shubh) : Replace the deprecated canceled with Cancellation Error. PR #197605 @SimonSiefke (Simon Siefke) fix: memory leak in menubar PR #198052 fix: memory leak in defaultWorkerFactory PR #198710 @sparxooo (sparxooo) : Fix for #200257 plus existing trailing non-numerics regex fix PR #200919 @Splizard (Quentin Quaadgras) : Mobile/Android: support text selection with a pen/stylus. PR #198578 @susiwen8 (susiwen8) fix: #200046 PR #200485 fix: install in npm script shouldn't be opened PR #201082 @VDisawal : #198975: saveValue => historyNavigator.add PR #199142 @wenfangdu (Wenfang Du) : feat(git): added autoClosingPairs in language configuration files PR #131403 @Yesterday17 (Yesterday17) : fix ExtHostLabelService typo PR #198855 @yiliang114 (易良) : fix: console format of fetchUrl PR #198909 @zWingz (zWing) : fix registerProfileContentHandler typos PR #183197 Contributions to vscode-flake8 : @maxg203 (Max Goodridge) : Fix link in README.md PR #269 Contributions to vscode-hexeditor : @IngilizAdam (Hasan Tuna) : Select between offsets PR #470 Contributions to vscode-languageserver-node : @debonte (Erik De Bonte) : Support WorkspaceEditMetadata in workspace/applyEdit PR #1390 @MariaSolOs (Maria José Solano) Snippet edit feature PR #1343 Allow undefined snippet edit annotation ID PR #1408 @rroessler (Reuben Roessler) : Changed Successful Exit Notification for Node Client PR #1404 @sh-cho (Seonghyeon Cho) : Update build status badge with Azure pipeline PR #1392 @werat (Andy Hippo) : Always delete feature providers in unregister() PR #1380 Contributions to vscode-pull-request-github : @Balastrong (Leonardo Montini) : Create issue from markdown template PR #5503 @joshuaobrien Batch mark/unmark files as viewed PR #4700 Remove a few unused variables 🌱 PR #5510 @pouyakary (Pouya Kary ✨) : Fixes #5620 PR #5621 Contributions to vscode-vsce : @sebas2day (Sebastiaan Brouwer) : feat: Support for yarn workspaces PR #493 @whosafe : Filter data from other platforms PR #912 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @alcarney (Alex Carney) Add lsp-devtools to utilities PR #1859 Add esbonio language server PR #1860 @asukaminato0721 (Asuka Minato) : add-vscoq PR #1869 @BeardedFish (Darian Benam) : Add Apache Dispatcher Config to the Language Server Implementations list PR #1875 @DanTup (Danny Tuppeny) : Clarify snippet escaping rules PR #1868 @Fomys (Louis Chauvet) : Clarify CompletionItem.textEdit notes PR #1722 @mhanberg (Mitchell Hanberg) : fix typo in workspace/configuration PR #1823 Contributions to monaco-editor : @kokovtsev (Dmitry Kokovtsev) : fix: enable markdown in JSON completion details PR #4210 @mevisioam : Expose JSON worker PR #4299 @nora-soderlund (Nora Söderlund) : chore(docs): fix monaco.d.ts link PR #4243 @OfekShilon (Ofek) Small wording fix in the site PR #4254 Remove 2 java-only operators from c++ tokenizer PR #4255 Fix suggestion for #4253 PR #4256 @soof-golan (Soof Golan) : feat: Python 3.12 keywords support PR #4212 @tamayika : Change JSON symbol information to document symbol PR #3894 Contributions to node-jsonc-parser : @H4ad (Vinicius Lourenço) : perf(format): cache breaklines and spaces as much as possible PR #81 On this page there are 19 sections On this page Accessibility Workbench Review multiple files in diff editor Editor Source Control Notebooks Terminal Tasks Debug Testing Languages Remote Development Contributions to extensions Preview Features Proposed APIs Finalized APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_100 | April 2025 (version 1.100) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 April 2025 (version 1.100) Release date: May 8, 2025 Update : Enable Next Edit Suggestions (NES) by default in VS Code Stable ( more... ). Update 1.100.1 : The update addresses these security issues . Update 1.100.2 : The update addresses these issues . Update 1.100.3 : The update addresses these issues . Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the April 2025 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Chat Custom instructions and reusable prompts ( more... ). Smarter results with tools for GitHub, extensions, and notebooks ( more... ). Image and Streamable HTTP support for MCP ( more... ). Chat performance Faster responses on repeat chat requests ( more... ). Faster edits in agent mode ( more... ). Editor experience Improved multi-window support for chat and editors ( more... ). Staged changes now easier to identify ( more... ). If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Chat Prompt and instructions files You can tailor your AI experience in VS Code to your specific coding practices and technology stack by using Markdown-based instructions and prompt files. We've aligned the implementation and usage of these two related concepts, however they each have distinct purposes. Instructions files Setting : chat.instructionsFilesLocations Instructions files (also known as custom instructions or rules) provide a way to describe common guidelines and context for the AI model in a Markdown file, such as code style rules, or which frameworks to use. Instructions files are not standalone chat requests, but rather provide context that you can apply to a chat request. Instructions files use the .instructions.md file suffix. They can be located in your user data folder or in the workspace. The chat.instructionsFilesLocations setting lists the folders that contain instruction files. You can manually attach instructions to a specific chat request, or they can be automatically added: To add them manually, use the Add Context button in the Chat view, and then select Instructions... . Alternatively use the Chat: Attach Instructions... command from the Command Palette. This brings up a picker that lets you select existing instructions files or create a new one to attach. To automatically add instructions to a prompt, add the applyTo Front Matter header to the instructions file to indicate which files the instructions apply to. If a chat request contains a file that matches the given glob pattern, the instructions file is automatically attached. The following example provides instructions for TypeScript files ( applyTo: '**/*.ts' ): --- applyTo : '**/*.ts' --- Place curly braces on separate lines for multi-line blocks: if (condition) { doSomething(); } else { doSomethingElse(); } You can create instruction files with the Chat: New Instructions File... command. Moreover, the files created in the user data folder can be automatically synchronized across multiple user machines through the Settings Sync service. Make sure to check the Prompts and Instructions option in the Backup and Sync Settings... dialog. Learn more about instruction files in our documentation. Prompt files Setting : chat.promptFilesLocations Prompt files describe a standalone, complete chat request, including the prompt text, chat mode, and tools to use. Prompt files are useful for creating reusable chat requests for common tasks. For example, you can add a prompt file for creating a front-end component, or to perform a security review. Prompt files use the .prompt.md file suffix. They can be located in your user data folder or in the workspace. The chat.promptFilesLocations setting lists the folder where prompt files are looked for. There are several ways to run a prompt file: Type / in the chat input field, followed by the prompt file name. Open the prompt file in an editor and press the 'Play' button in the editor tool bar. This enables you to quickly iterate on the prompt and run it without having to switch back to the Chat view. Use the Chat: Run Prompt File... command from the Command Palette. Prompt files can have the following Front Matter metadata headers to indicate how they should be run: mode : the chat mode to use when invoking the prompt ( ask , edit , or agent mode). tools : if the mode is agent , the list of tools that are available for the prompt. The following example shows a prompt file for generating release notes, that runs in agent mode, and can use a set of tools: --- mode : 'agent' tools : [ 'getCurrentMilestone' , 'getReleaseFeatures' , 'file_search' , 'semantic_search' , 'read_file' , 'insert_edit_into_file' , 'create_file' , 'replace_string_in_file' , 'fetch_webpage' , 'vscode_search_extensions_internal' ] --- Generate release notes for the features I worked in the current release and update them in the release notes file. Use [ release notes writing instructions file ]( .github/instructions/release-notes-writing.instructions.md ) as a guide. To create a prompt file, use the Chat: New Prompt File... command from the Command Palette. Learn more about prompt files in our documentation. Improvements and notes Instructions and prompt files now have their own language IDs, configurable in the language mode dialog for any file open document ("Prompt" and "Instructions" respectively). This allows, for instance, using untitled documents as temporary prompt files before saving them as files to disk. We renamed the Chat: Use Prompt command to Chat: Run Prompt . Furthermore, the command now runs the selected prompt immediately , as opposed to attaching it as chat context as it did before. Both file types now also support the description metadata in their headers, providing a common place for short and user-friendly prompt summaries. In the future, this header is planned to be used along with the applyTo header as the rule that determines if the file needs to be auto-included with chat requests (for example, description: 'Code style rules for front-end components written in TypeScript.' ) Faster agent mode edits We've implemented support for OpenAI's apply patch editing format (GPT 4.1 and o4-mini) and Anthropic’s replace string tool (Claude Sonnet 3.7 and 3.5) in agent mode. This means that you benefit from significantly faster edits, especially in large files. The update for OpenAI models is on by default in VS Code Insiders and gradually rolling out to Stable. The Anthropic update is available for all users in both Stable and Insiders. Base model in chat We're gradually rolling out GPT-4.1 as the default base model in chat in VS Code. You can use the model switcher in the Chat view to change to another model at any time. Search code of a GitHub repository with the #githubRepo tool Imagine you need to ask a question about a GitHub repository, but you don't have it open in your editor. For example, you want to know how a specific function is implemented in the microsoft/vscode repository. You can now use the #githubRepo tool to search for code snippets in any GitHub repository that you have access to. This tool takes a user/repo as extra input. For example, "how to implement factory pattern in TS #githubRepo microsoft/vscode". You can also use custom instructions to hint when and how to use this tool, as shown in the following example: --- applyTo : '**' --- Use the `#githubRepo` tool with `microsoft/vscode` to find relevant code snippets in the VS Code codebase. Use the `#githubRepo` tool with `microsoft/typescript` to answer questions about how TypeScript is implemented. If you want to ask about the repo you are currently working on, you can just use the #codebase tool . Also, the #githubRepo tool is only for searching for relevant code snippets. The GitHub MCP server provides tools for working with GitHub issues and pull requests. Learn more about adding MCP servers in VS Code . Find Marketplace extensions with the extensions tool Use the extensions tool ( #extensions ) in chat to find extensions from the Marketplace. Based on your chat prompt, the tool is automatically invoked, or you can explicitly reference it in your prompt with #extensions . The tool returns a list of extensions that match your query. You can install extensions directly from the results. Improvements to the web page fetch tool Last month, we introduced the fetch tool ( #fetch ) for retrieving the contents of a web page right from chat, and include it as context for your prompt. If you missed that release note, check out the initial release of the fetch tool release note and examples. This iteration, we have made several big changes to the tool including: Entire page as context : We now add the entire page as context, rather than a subset. With larger context windows, we have the ability to give the model the entire page. For example, it's now possible to ask summarization questions that require as much of the page as possible. If you do manage to fill up the context window, the fetch tool is smart enough to exclude the less relevant sections of the page. That way, you don't exceed the context window limit, while still keeping the important parts. A standardized page format (Markdown) : Previously, we formatted fetched webpages in a custom hierarchical format that did the job, but was sometimes hard to reason with because of its custom nature. We now convert fetched webpages into Markdown, a standardized language. This improves the reliability of the relevancy detection and is a format that most language models know deeply, so they can reason with it more easily. We'd love to hear how you use the fetch tool and if there are any capabilities you'd like to see from it! Chat input improvements We have made several improvements to the chat input box: Attachments : when you reference context in the prompt text with # , they now also appear as an attachment pill. This makes it simpler to understand what's being sent to the language model. Context picker : we streamlined the context picker to make it simpler to pick files, folders, and other attachment types. Done button : we heard your feedback about the "Done"-button and we removed it! No more confusion about unexpected session endings. Now, we only start a new session when you create a new chat ( ⌘N (Windows, Linux Ctrl+N ) ). Chat mode keyboard shortcuts The keyboard shortcut ⌃⌘I (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Alt+I ) still just opens the Chat view, but the ⇧⌘I (Windows Ctrl+Shift+I , Linux Ctrl+Shift+Alt+I ) shortcut now opens the Chat view and switches to agent mode . If you'd like to set up keyboard shortcuts for other chat modes, there is a command for each mode: workbench.action.chat.openAgent workbench.action.chat.openEdit workbench.action.chat.openAsk Autofix diagnostics from agent mode edits Setting : github.copilot.chat.agent.autoFix If a file edit in agent mode introduces new errors, agent mode can now detect them, and automatically propose a follow-up edit. This means that you don't have to send a follow-up prompt to ask agent mode to fix any errors. You can disable this behavior with github.copilot.chat.agent.autoFix . Handling of undo and manual edits in agent mode Previously, making manual edits during an agent mode session could confuse the model. Now, the agent is prompted about your changes, and should re-read files when necessary before editing files that might have changed. Conversation summary and prompt caching We've made some changes to how our agent mode prompt is built to optimize for prompt caching. Prompt caching is a way to speed up model responses by maintaining a stable prefix for the prompt. The next request is able to resume from that prefix, and the result is that each request should be a bit faster. This is especially effective in a repetitive series of requests with large context, like you typically have in agent mode. When your conversation gets long, or your context gets very large, you might see a "Summarized conversation history" message in your agent mode session: Instead of keeping the whole conversation as a FIFO, breaking the cache, we compress the conversation so far into a summary of the most important information and the current state of your task. This keeps the prompt prefix stable, and your responses fast. MCP support for Streamable HTTP This release adds support for the new Streamable HTTP transport for Model Context Protocol servers. Streamable HTTP servers are configured just like existing SSE servers, and our implementation is backwards-compatible with SSE servers: { "servers" : { "my-mcp-server" : { "url" : "http://localhost:3000/mcp" } } } Learn more about MCP support in VS Code . MCP support for image output We now support MCP servers that generate images as part of their tool output. Note that not all language models support reading images from tool output. For example, although GPT-4.1 has vision capability, it does not currently support reading images from tools. Enhanced input, output, and progress from MCP servers We have enhanced the UI that shows MCP server tool input and output, and have also added support for MCP's new progress messages. Theme: Codesong (preview on vscode.dev ) MCP config generation uses inputs To help keep your secrets secure, AI-assisted configurations generated by the MCP: Add Server command now generate inputs for any secrets, rather than inlining them into the resulting configuration. Inline chat V2 (Preview) Setting : inlineChat.enableV2 We have been working on a revamped version of inline chat ⌘I (Windows, Linux Ctrl+I ) . Its theme is still "bringing chat into code", but behind the scenes it uses the same logic as chat edits. This means better use of the available context and a better code-editing strategy. You can enable inline chat v2 via inlineChat.enableV2 Further, there is now a more lightweight UX that can optionally be enabled. With the inlineChat.hideOnRequest setting, inline chat hides as soon as a request is made. It then minimizes into the chat-editing overlay, which enables accepting or discarding changes, or restoring the inline chat control. Select and attach UI elements to chat (Experimental) Setting : chat.sendElementsToChat.enabled While you're developing a web application, you might want to ask chat about specific UI elements of a web page. You can now use the built-in Simple Browser to attach UI elements as context to chat. After opening any locally-hosted site via the built-in Simple Browser (launch it with the Simple Browser: Show command), a new toolbar is now shown where you can select Start to select any element in the site that you want. This attaches a screenshot of the selected element, and the HTML and CSS of the element. Configure what is attached to chat with: chat.sendElementsToChat.attachCSS : enable or disable attaching the associated CSS chat.sendElementsToChat.attachImages : enable or disable attaching the screenshot of the selected element This experimental feature is enabled by default for all Simple Browsers, but can be disabled with chat.sendElementsToChat.enabled . Create and launch tasks in agent mode (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.newWorkspaceCreation.enabled In the previous release, we introduced the github.copilot.chat.newWorkspaceCreation.enabled (Experimental) setting to enable workspace creation with agent mode. Now, at the end of this creation flow, you are prompted to create and run a task for launching your app or project. This streamlines the project launch process and enables easy task reuse. Accessibility Merge editor improvements The merge editor is now more accessible. To learn about available actions, open the accessibility help dialog within the merge editor ( ⌥F1 (Windows Alt+F1 , Linux Shift+Alt+F1 ) ). Key actions include Merge Editor: Complete Merge ( ⌘Enter (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Enter ) ) and Toggle Between Merge Editor Inputs ( ⇧⌘T (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+T ) ). The currently focused input is also now announced to assistive technologies. Next edit suggestion enhancements The new setting accessibility.signals.nextEditSuggestion notifies you when a predicted suggestion is available. Review and accept suggestions through the accessible view ( ⌥F2 (Windows Alt+F2 , Linux Shift+Alt+F2 ) ). Additionally, accessibility.signals.diffLineAdded and accessibility.signals.diffLineRemoved provide audio cues during navigation to make diff review accessible. Review Copilot user requests from the accessible view When in agent mode , tool invocations or terminal commands sometimes require user permission to run. Review these actions within the accessible view ( ⌥F2 (Windows Alt+F2 , Linux Shift+Alt+F2 ) ). Unique accessibility sounds accessibility.signals.save.sound now has its own distinct sound and no longer shares audio with accessibility.signals.terminalCommandSucceeded.sound . Editor Experience Floating window modes Floating windows in VS Code allow you to move editors and certain views out of the main window into a smaller window for lightweight multi-window setups. There are two new modes a floating window can have: Compact: we hide certain UI elements to make more room for the actual content Always-on-top: the window stays on top of all other windows until you leave this mode Here is an example of how to turn a floating editor window into compact mode: We use compact mode by default for when you create a chat in a new window. Combined with the option to have the window always on top, you can always keep the Chat view around for asking questions! We introduced new commands if you prefer to use keyboard shortcuts for these actions: workbench.action.toggleWindowAlwaysOnTop : to toggle always on top mode workbench.action.enableWindowAlwaysOnTop : to set the floating window always on top workbench.action.disableWindowAlwaysOnTop : to set the floating window to normal workbench.action.toggleCompactAuxiliaryWindow : to toggle compact mode workbench.action.enableCompactAuxiliaryWindow : to enable compact mode workbench.action.disableCompactAuxiliaryWindow : to disable compact mode Note: even in compact mode you can create complex editor layouts and open other editors. Secondary Side Bar default visibility Setting : workbench.secondarySideBar.defaultVisibility By default, the Secondary Side Bar is hidden when you open a new workspace or window. With the new setting workbench.secondarySideBar.defaultVisibility , you can control if the Secondary Side Bar should open automatically in new workspaces or windows. You can pick from: hidden : this is the default and keeps the Secondary Side Bar hidden visibleInWorkspace : this opens the Secondary Side Bar if you open a folder or multi-root workspace visible : this always opens the Secondary Side Bar Note that after a workspace or window has been opened, the visibility becomes a workspace state and overrides the setting value. If you close the Secondary Side Bar, it will remain closed in that workspace or window. Mandatory extension signature verification Extension signature verification is now required on all platforms: Windows, macOS, and Linux. Previously, this verification was only mandatory on Windows and macOS. With this release, Linux now also enforces extension signature verification, ensuring that all extensions are properly validated before installation. This change further strengthens security by preventing the installation of potentially malicious extensions. For more information, see the Extension Signing . Note: Mandatory extension signature verification remains disabled on Linux ARM32 builds due to issue #248308 . This is expected to be resolved in the next release. Learn more links for malicious extensions When an extension is identified as malicious, VS Code now provides links to additional information explaining why the extension was flagged. These "Learn More" links connect users to GitHub issues or documentation with details about the security concerns, helping you better understand the potential risks. Prevent installation of Copilot Chat pre-release versions in VS Code stable VS Code now prevents the installation of the pre-release version of the Copilot Chat extension in VS Code Stable. This helps avoid situations where you inadvertently install the Copilot Chat pre-release version and get stuck in a broken state. This means that you can only install the Copilot Chat extension pre-release version in the Insiders build of VS Code. Command to open a view without focus Views (tree views and webview views) can now be opened without focusing them. This is useful for extensions and keyboard shortcuts that want to open a view but not take focus away from the current editor. The command is your-view-id.open , and it takes a property bag argument: { preserveFocus: boolean} . Semantic text search with keyword suggestions (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.search.keywordSuggestions Semantic text search now supports AI-powered keyword suggestions. By enabling this feature, you will start seeing relevant references or definitions that might help you find the code you are looking for. Code Editing New Next Edit Suggestions (NES) model Setting : github.copilot.nextEditSuggestions.enabled We're excited to introduce a new model powering NES, designed to provide faster and more contextually relevant code recommendations. This updated model offers improved performance, delivering suggestions with reduced latency, and offering suggestions that are less intrusive and align more closely with your recent edits. This update is part of our ongoing commitment to refining AI-assisted development tools within Visual Studio Code. Import suggestions Setting : github.copilot.nextEditSuggestions.fixes Next Edit Suggestions (NES) can now automatically suggest adding missing import statements in JavaScript and TypeScript files. Enable this feature by setting github.copilot.nextEditSuggestions.fixes . We plan to further enhance this capability by supporting imports from additional languages in future updates. Next Edit Suggestions (NES) on by default Next Edit Suggestions are now on by default in VS Code Insiders and we're gradually rolling them out to Stable. Generate alt text in HTML or Markdown You can now generate or update existing alt text in HTML and Markdown files. Navigate to any line containing an embedded image and trigger the quick fix via ⌘. (Windows, Linux Ctrl+. ) or by selecting the lightbulb icon. Notebooks Find and replace history persistence The Notebook Find control now supports persistent history for both the find and replace input fields. This persists across reloads, and is controlled by the settings editor.find.history and editor.find.replaceHistory . Drag and drop cell outputs to chat To enhance existing support for cell output usage within chat, outputs are now able to be dragged into the Chat view for a seamless attachment experience. Currently, only image and textual outputs are supported. Outputs with an image mime type are directly draggable, however to avoid clashing with text selection, textual outputs require holding the alt modifier key to enable dragging. We are exploring UX improvements in the coming releases. Notebook tools for agent mode Run cell Chat now has an LLM tool to run notebook cells, which allows the agent to perform updates based on cell run results or perform its own data exploration as it builds out a notebook. Get kernel state The agent can find out which cells have been executed in the current kernel session, and read the active variables by using the Kernel State tool. List/Install packages The Jupyter extension contributes tools for listing and installing packages into the environment that's being used as the notebook's kernel. The operation is delegated to the Python Environments extension if available; otherwise, it attempts to use the pip package manager. Source Control Quick diff decorations for staged changes To address a long-time feature request, this milestone we have added quick diff editor decorations for staged changes. Now you can view your staged changes directly from the editor, without needing to open the Source Control view. You can customize the color of the staged changes quick diff decorations by using the following theme tokens: editorGutter.addedSecondaryBackground , editorGutter.modifiedSecondaryBackground , editorGutter.deletedSecondaryBackground . If you do not want to see quick diff decorations for staged changes, you can hide them by using the Diff Decorations submenu that is available in the editor gutter context menu. Debugging Disassembly view context menu Thanks to a community contribution, we now have a context menu in the disassembly view. JavaScript debugger Network view Recent versions of Node.js have enhanced its network debugging capabilities. The experimental network view will be enabled by default on recent versions of Node.js that support it well (v22.14.0 and above). Languages Show browser support for CSS and HTML When hovering over a CSS property, HTML element, or HTML attribute, you now see a summary of how well that property or element is supported across browsers using Baseline . Default syntax highlighting for .*.env files Files with name format .*.env are now syntax highlighted as .ini files. Expandable hovers for JavaScript and TypeScript (Experimental) Setting : typescript.experimental.expandableHover We've continued to iterate on the expandable hover feature for JavaScript and TypeScript. This feature lets you use a + and - in the hover control to show more or less type information. This feature is still experimental but you can try it today by enabling typescript.experimental.expandableHover . You must be using TypeScript version 5.9 or above, for example by installing the TypeScript nightly extension . Remote Development The Remote Development extensions , allow you to use a Dev Container , remote machine via SSH or Remote Tunnels , or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. Dev container instructions files Dev Container features and images now include instructions files describing their tools and configuration. VS Code chat can automatically use this context, improving the relevance and accuracy of its suggestions during development. Contributions to extensions Python Branch coverage support Branch coverage is now supported in the Testing Explorer for Python! Note that your coveragepy version must be >= 7.7 for this feature. You can upgrade coverage by running pip install coverage==7.7 . Python Environments Quick Create command The Python Environments extension has added support for Quick Create, making the environment creation process more seamless. Quick Create minimizes the input needed from you to create new virtual environments by detecting the latest Python version on your machine to create the virtual environment and install any workspace dependencies with a single click. This will create a .venv in your workspace for venv-based environments, and .conda for-conda based environments. You can access Quick Create via the Python: Create Environment command in the Command Palette. Python Environments chat tools The Python Environments extension (preview) now includes two chat tools: “Get Python Environment Information” and “Install Python Package”. To use these tools, you can either directly reference them in your prompt by adding #pythonGetEnvironmentInfo #pythonInstallPackage , or agent mode will automatically call the tool as applicable. These tools seamlessly detect appropriate environment information based on file or workspace context, and handle package installation with accurate environment resolution. Color picker when using Pylance Pylance can now display an interactive color swatch directly in the editor for recognized color values in Python files, making it easier to visualize and pick colors on the fly. To try it out, you can enable python.analysis.enableColorPicker . Supported formats include #RGB (like "#001122") and #RGBA (like "#001122FF"). AI Code Actions: Convert Format String (Experimental) When using Pylance, there's a new experimental AI Code Action for converting string concatenations to f-string or format(). To try it out, select the Convert to f-string with Copilot or the Convert to format() call with Copilot Code Actions through the light bulb when selecting a symbol in the string you wish to convert, or through Ctrl + . / Cmd + . . This experience is enabled via the following setting: "python.analysis.aiCodeActions" : { "convertFormatString" : true } GitHub Pull Requests and Issues There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests extension, which enables you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. New features include: Ask questions in chat about the active pull request, such as "Address all comments in the #activePullRequest". View issues in a webview, just like you can view pull requests. Polish and alignment of the "Pull Requests", "Issues", and "Notifications" views. Prepared for the release of GitHub's Project Padawan by enabling assignment of issues to Copilot, @-mentioning of Copilot, and ensuring it will be displayed properly in the UI. Review the changelog for the 0.110.0 release of the extension to learn about the other highlights. Extension Authoring Text Encodings We finalized the API for working with text encodings in VS Code. Specifically, this new API allows you to: Get the current encoding of a TextDocument Open a TextDocument with a specific encoding Encode a string to a Uint8Array with a specific encoding Decode a Uint8Array to a string using a specific encoding ESM support for extensions The NodeJS extension host now supports extensions that use JavaScript-modules (ESM). All it needs is the "type": "module" entry in your extension's package.json file. With that, the JavaScript code can use import and export statements, including the special module import('vscode') . Find a sample here: https://github.com/jrieken/vscode-esm-sample-extension . Note that ESM support isn't for the web worker extension host yet. There are some technical challenges that need to be overcome first. We'll post updates on https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/130367 . Stay tuned! Proposed APIs Tool calling for images Last iteration, we added a proposed API so that extensions can attach images and send vision requests to the language model. This iteration, we've expanded on this API to allow tool call results to include images as well. Check out this API proposal issue to see a usage example and to stay up to date with the status of this API. MCP servers contributed by extensions Extensions are able to programmatically contribute extensions to the editor by using the new proposed API . This is an alternative to users hardcoding configuration for each server in their settings or mcp.json . If this API is interesting to you, check out its sample and the API proposal issue to stay up to date with the status of this API. MCP Tool Annotations VS Code will now display the human-readable names of MCP servers with tools configured with the appropriate tool annotations . Additionally, tools marked with readOnlyHint: true in their annotations will be allowed to run without requiring user confirmation. Variable line heights It is now possible to define variable line heights on a monaco editor by setting the line height value in the IModelDecorationOptions type. If two line heights are set on a line, the maximum of the two is used on the line. Note that for simplicity for now, the line height is set only on the first line of the corresponding decoration range. In the following screen recording, lines 24 and 32 are rendered with a larger line height than the default one. This work is not yet available to extensions, but will roll out after some more testing. Notable fixes 244939 - Personal Microsoft accounts logs out very quickly (few mins to few hours) Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @albertosantini (Alberto Santini) @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @RedCMD (RedCMD) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @ahojukka5 (Jukka Aho) : Update chatExecuteActions.ts PR #246494 @alexweininger (Alex Weininger) : fix: handle cancellation errors inside edit session identity provider PR #247450 @andrewbranch (Andrew Branch) : Allow disabling built-in TS/JS extension in favor of tsgo PR #246858 @BABA983 (BABA) : A command to accept all combination PR #225132 @batsev : Git - validate branch name before creation PR #245029 @brthom (Ben Thomas) : Fix test items sorting in Testing Explorer to use natural file order PR #246352 @bytemain (Jiacheng) fix: correct filtering logic for file-based recommendations PR #245062 refactor(nls): use then for JSON parsing PR #247013 @Cecil0o0 (hj) : git: make Letter/Text/Color semantically consistency PR #245889 @eps1lon (Sebastian "Sebbie" Silbermann) : Deemphasize old JSX transform PR #246738 @futurist (James Yang) : fix: runCommand type PR #246198 @gabritto (Gabriela Araujo Britto) [typescript-language-features] Re-add expandable hover PR #246899 [typescript-language-features] make expandable hover true by default PR #247343 @guiserle (guiserle) : config: Resolve variables returned by commands PR #246641 @huntertran (Tuan Tran Van) : Replace single line break with double line break for commit description in git blame hover popup PR #245779 @johnscollins98 (John Collins) : #245665 fix early task exit with empty promptString input PR #246834 @KapitanOczywisty : Fix html derivative grammar consuming php code, fixes #237262 PR #245076 @luantranminh (Tran Minh Luan) : argv: update description for add-mcp PR #246473 @manabu-nakamura (nakamura) tooltip text of close button is internationalized PR #245190 tooltip text for close button is internationalized (2) PR #245333 normalize ellipsis PR #246447 @mdanish-kh (Muhammad Danish) : Update WinGet configuration file location & extension PR #242241 @mkhuzaima (Muhammad Khuzaima Umair) : Set DragData when directory is dragged PR #243656 @mortalYoung (野迂迂) : fix: remove necessary async declaration PR #247213 @nknguyenhc (Nguyen) : Goto definition for built-in symbols in HTML script PR #244074 @noahbowman (Noah) : #188711 - Walkthrough Focus-Visible Outline PR #247650 @pedrofrazaopacheco (Pedro Frazão Pacheco) : Fixes microsoft/vscode#240654: Avoid encoding reserved chars in JSON schema URL PR #244934 @pisv (Vladimir Piskarev) : Merge Editor: fix a bug in LineRange.join(other) PR #227585 @RedCMD (RedCMD) Fix template.expression brackets #190564 PR #245786 YAML auto trigger code completion in strings #239679 PR #246939 @s-rigaud (Samuel Rigaud) test: fix typos PR #247259 fix: vscode-dts typos PR #247263 fix: toggleApplicationScope typo PR #247264 @sfaut : Fix PHP f* files functions signatures PR #246964 @thegecko (Rob Moran) : Add disassembly view context menu PR #212500 @theskcd : [vscode] Decorations from #file is much better and does not break on new line PR #231948 @tjcork (tjcork) : Use parameter expansion to fetch envs for envVarCollections in shellIntegration-bash.sh PR #245264 @tmm1 (Aman Karmani) : tsb: small build improvements PR #237450 @Victuracor (Victuracor) : Fix a typo in extensions/typescript-language-features/package.nls.json PR #245713 @whistlegraph (jeffrey) : fixes issue #662 (enables Pointer Lock Web API) PR #210875 @wolfgang42 (Wolfgang Faust) : feat: markdown-basics snippets: quote all lines PR #246871 @zobo (Damjan Cvetko) : Also replace keys in object within variable substitution PR #245989 Contributions to vscode-css-languageservice : @AlterNT (NTPS) : Support @scope PR #434 @rviscomi (Rick Viscomi) : Add Baseline status to hovercards PR #428 Contributions to vscode-js-debug : @mikaelwaltersson (Mikael Waltersson) : Fix expansion of "floating" WASM variables in repl/watch + readMemory when WASM memory is SharedArrayBuffer PR #2199 Contributions to vscode-json-languageservice : @fengzilong (MO) : feat: make newJSONDocument and JSONDocument consistent PR #259 Contributions to vscode-jupyter : @alexfanqi (Alex Fan) : change the scope of excludeUserSitePackages to window PR #16377 @realDuang (Duang) : fix: repair python code escaping path in environment service PR #16518 Contributions to vscode-mypy : @tdscheper (Tommy Scheper) : When cwd config option is ${nearestConfig}, look for all of mypy.ini, .mypy.ini, pyproject.toml, setup.cfg PR #357 Contributions to vscode-notebook-renderers : @marthacryan (Martha Cryan) : Update plotly.js version to 3.0.0 PR #230 Contributions to vscode-pull-request-github : @kabel (Kevin Abel) : Fix merge email confirmation when git config fails PR #6797 @timrogers (Tim Rogers) : When copilot-swe-agent is the author of a comment, render with the Copilot identity PR #6794 Contributions to vscode-python-debugger : @rchiodo (Rich Chiodo) : Allow autoReload in attach configurations PR #676 Contributions to vscode-python-environments : @InSyncWithFoo (InSync) : fix: clarify that showSkipOption also applies to uninstallations PR #288 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @hippietrail (Andrew Dunbar) : several grammar fixes PR #2123 @imbant (imbant) : Ensure document state synchronization before client requests PR #2017 @ocfbnj : Add thrift-ls for Thrift PR #2128 @rtorralba (rtorralba) Add ZX Basic language server to the implementors list PR #2121 Replace ZX Basic with Boriel Basic language server into the implement… PR #2125 Contributions to monaco-editor : @RoccoC (Rocco Cataldo) : Update webpack plugin to support module workers PR #4742 On this page there are 14 sections On this page Chat Accessibility Editor Experience Code Editing Notebooks Source Control Debugging Languages Remote Development Contributions to extensions Extension Authoring Proposed APIs Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_78 | April 2023 (version 1.78) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. 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Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the April 2023 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Accessibility improvements - Better screen reader support, new audio cues. New color themes - "Modern" light and dark color theme defaults. Profile templates - Built-in templates for Python, Java, Data Science, and more. Drag and drop selector - Choose how you'd like item links placed into the editor. Standalone color picker - Color picker UI to insert or modify color formats. Quick Fixes for Source Control input - Fix spelling and other errors right in the input box. Markdown drag and drop videos - Easily add video tags in Markdown files. Notebooks insert images as attachments - Choose between an image link, path, or attachment. Git LFS and VS Code for the Web - Use vscode.dev for repos with Git Large File Storage. VS Code Day 2023 - Catch up on the sessions in the YouTube playlist. If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Accessibility Aria verbosity settings Screen reader users can exclude hints from a feature's aria-label to decrease redundancy via the "accessibility.verbosity.diff-editor" and "accessibility.verbosity.terminal" settings. Improved and aligned Quick Pick experience Previously, users of accessibility mode experienced different behavior when working with the Command Palette and other Quick Picks. In accessibility mode, the first item of the Quick Pick wasn't selected in order to be fully accessible. This iteration, we've introduced new behavior that allows you to have the best of both worlds: an accessible and fast Quick Pick workflow allowing you to hit Enter right away. Note : One tradeoff with this approach is that if an item in the Quick Pick is selected, you are not able to hear ARIA changes to the Quick Pick input box, due to an ARIA limitation. To hear these changes, you can press Shift + Tab until no item of the list is selected. Terminal Terminal accessible buffer improvements Jump between commands using ⌥↓ (Windows, Linux Alt+Down ) and ⌥↑ (Windows, Linux Alt+Up ) . Use Set Selection Anchor , Select from Anchor to Cursor , and page navigation via ⇧PageUp (Windows, Linux Shift+PageUp ) and ⇧PageDown (Windows, Linux Shift+PageDown ) . Preview the position when using Go to Symbol in Accessible View ( ⇧⌘O (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+O ) ) before accepting a command to go to a new location. Engage with the output while dynamic updates occur. Terminal Accessibility Help menu The terminal's Accessibility Help menu can now be navigated using arrow keys. Sorry, your browser doesn't support HTML 5 video. Diff editor audio cue improvements VS Code now caches audio cues so they only have to be loaded once, yielding better responsiveness, and have improved the tones used for the diff editor. Go to Line/Column announcement When Go to Line/Column... ( ⌃G (Windows, Linux Ctrl+G ) ) is invoked, the screen reader now reads the associated line content. Workbench New default Color Themes New 'Dark Modern' and 'Light Modern' themes replace 'Dark+' and 'Light+' as the new default dark and light color themes. Profile templates Profiles let you quickly switch your editor extensions, settings, and UI layout depending on your current project or task. To help you get started with profiles, we are shipping Profile Templates , which are curated profiles for different programming languages and scenarios. You can use a profile template as is or use it as a starting point to customize further for you own workflows. You select a profile template through the Profiles > Create Profile... dropdown: Once you select a profile template, you can review the settings, extensions, and other data, and remove individual items if you don't want to include them in your new Profile. After you create the new profile based on a template, changes made to settings, extensions, or UI are persisted to your profile. Glyph margin decoration rendering improvements This month, we've improved the rendering of decorations that appear in the editor margin. Debugging-related decorations such as breakpoints and stack frame pointers will always render next to the editor line numbers. Additional decorations render to the left of any debugging-related decorations. This allows you to view your breakpoints even if there are other decorations on the same line, such as test decorations or bookmarks. Note that clicks are not yet scoped to individual decorations. Copy images from the image preview You can now copy images from the built-in image preview using ⌘C (Windows, Linux Ctrl+C ) or by right-clicking in the preview and selecting Copy . The copied image data can be pasted back into VS Code or into other applications. Editor Drop selector VS Code lets you drop files and content into text editors by holding Shift before dropping. In this update, we've added UI that lets you change how this content is inserted into the file. After you drop an image into a Markdown file for example, this control lets you switch between inserting a Markdown image, a workspace relative path to the image, and the full path to the image: The drop selector control appears whenever you drop content and there is more than one possible way it could be inserted. You can open the control by clicking on it or using ⌘. (Windows, Linux Ctrl+. ) . The drop selector goes away as soon as you start typing or move the cursor outside of the inserted text. You can also fully disable the drop selector control using "editor.dropIntoEditor.showDropSelector": "never" . VS Code includes a few built-in ways to drop common content formats. Extensions can also add their own drop options using the DocumentDropEditProvider API. Standalone color picker It is now possible to launch a standalone color picker in order to insert and replace colors. To open the color picker, select Show or Focus Standalone Color Picker from the Command Palette. When no colors or color formats are provided by extensions, the color-picker falls back to CSS-formatted colors. It is also now possible to visualize inline color decorators for CSS-formatted colors in all file types. To display these decorators, enable the Editor: Default Color Decorators ( editor.defaultColorDecorators ) setting. New snippet variable for timezone offset A new snippet variable, CURRENT_TIMEZONE_OFFSET , is now available. This variable returns the current timezone offset in the format +HH:MM or -HH:MM (for example -07:00 ). This complements other time-related snippet variables such as CURRENT_YEAR , CURRENT_MONTH , CURRENT_DAY_NAME , etc. Diff algorithm improvements We continued improving the new diff algorithm in VS Code and deprecated the old algorithm. While the old algorithm is still the default for the diff editor, we will slowly change the default to the new algorithm and measure its performance. You can override the default by setting diffEditor.diffAlgorithm to advanced (new diff algorithm) or legacy (default). The new algorithm produces better diffs in many cases, but might be slower for some documents. Here are some examples (legacy vs. advanced): Improved line insertion diffs by considering indentation: Improved word insertion diffs by considering space and separator characters: More natural diffs by minimizing not just the length of the diff, but also the number of chunks: Less noise by extending character level diffs to entire words if a part of the word changed significantly: Diffing source code and even just evaluating the quality of a diff are hard problems and there is still room for improvement. If you encounter a diff where you think the algorithm could do better, try out our diff playground and share your feedback and ideas in our issue tracker! Inline completion improvements This iteration we rewrote the inline completion feature and fixed a lot of bugs . Most notably, Accept Word now works across lines and there is a new command Accept Line . To support this feature, accepting the next word/line does not ask the extension again, as inline completion provider extensions would often report entirely different suggestions when asking for inline completions of the next line. Extensions Improved extension recommendations notification The extension recommendations notification now shows the publisher of the recommended extension. This helps you make a more informed decision before installing the extension. The following images show the new notification when there are recommendations for both a single extension and multiple extensions. Informing about installed deprecated extensions If you have an extension installed that has been deprecated, you will now receive a notification informing you about it and suggesting alternatives. This is shown only once per deprecated extension. Source Control Quick Fixes in the Source Control input Code Actions and Quick Fixes are now supported in the Source Control message box: The Code Spell Checker extension, for example, adds spelling fixes to the Source Control input. Extensions can contribute additional fixes and Code Actions. GitHub repository rulesets VS Code already lets you define branch protection using the git.branchProtection setting. This milestone we added a new experimental feature that uses the recently announced GitHub repository rulesets to determine whether a branch is protected. If you are using GitHub repository rulesets, you can enable this feature using the github.branchProtection setting. Notebooks Drop image files into notebooks to create attachments You can now drag and drop image files into notebook Markdown cells to create attachments. When you drop the image, use the new drop selector control to select Insert Image as Attachment : This adds the image to the notebook as an attachment instead of simply adding a link to the image: Toggle notebook output scrolling You can now toggle individual cells to display output in a scrollable region either by command Notebook: Toggle Scroll Cell Output ( ⌘K Y (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K Y ) ) or the link in the truncation message. Find control improvements The notebook Find control now searches keywords on what's visually presented by default. Users can change the search scope (Markdown source, Markdown preview, code source, and code outputs) through setting notebook.find.scope . Additionally, when replacing matches, the Markdown cell is converted to an editable cell so you can make the replacement. When you're done, the cell is converted back to Markdown, and the preview is restored. Languages Drag and drop videos into Markdown files Want to insert a video into your Markdown? Just drag it into the editor and then hold Shift to drop it into the file: This inserts a <video> tag pointing to the video file. You can drag videos from VS Code's Explorer or from your local operating system. Strict nulls for JavaScript script blocks in HTML You can now use the js/ts.implicitProjectConfig.strictNullChecks setting to enable strict nulls for JavaScript in HTML script blocks: With strict nulls enabled, hovers and other IntelliSense features show when a type can be nullable. For example, notice how el now has a type of HTMLElement | null . This is because document.getElementById returns null if it can't find an element with that ID. Testing Continuous run can now be turned on for individual tests. This requires a test extension that supports continuous run and has adopted the supportsContinuousRun API finalized last iteration. VS Code for the Web Commit files to Git Large File Storage Git Large File Storage (LFS) allows you to efficiently store large files in Git repositories. github.dev and vscode.dev now support committing files to Git LFS in repositories hosted on GitHub, enabling easy updates from your browser without needing to install the LFS extension for Git locally. LFS commit support in github.dev and vscode.dev works out of the box when your repository already has a .gitattributes file in the root of your repository that specifies which file types should be stored with Git LFS. To set up your repository for Git LFS for the first time, consult the Git LFS documentation. Remote Development The Remote Development extensions , allow you to use a Dev Container , remote machine via SSH or Remote Tunnels , or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. You can learn about new extension features and bug fixes in the Remote Development release notes . And check out the Develop Anywhere with VS Code VS Code Day session. Contributions to extensions Python Jupyter extension no longer installed by default The Jupyter extension is no longer automatically installed alongside the Python extension by default. This change was made in response to feedback from Dev Container users who wanted a faster container creation process without the Jupyter extension installed by default. If you have Dev Container definitions that only list the Python extension and wish to continue using the Jupyter notebooks features in your containers, you can add the Jupyter extension ID to your devcontainer.json file: "customizations" : { "vscode" : { "extensions" : [ "ms-python.vscode-pylance" , "ms-python.python" , "ms-toolsai.jupyter" ] } } Alternatively, you can create a Profile that includes the Python and Jupyter extensions, as well as any other of your favorite extensions. Create environment command with microvenv When the Python: Create environment command is invoked using a Python distribution that doesn't have the venv package installed, the Python extension now uses microvenv as a fallback. This can be a hurdle for Python environments that are preinstalled on Unix-based systems. Microvenv is a lightweight Python module that offers a minimalist approach to creating virtual environments for your Python projects. It is not equipped with traditional activation scripts like virtual environments, but it provides a good alternative for creating an isolated environment when the venv module is not available in your Python distribution. The Create Environment command will also install pip into the environments created via microvenv . Formatter extension recommendations In previous releases, we announced new extensions for the Black Formatter and autopep8 that work in tandem with the Python extension through the Language Server Protocol (LSP) to provide formatting for Python files. In this release, we display a notification if you are still using the Python extension's built-in formatting features, prompting you to install these new extensions. Run Python actions are now in submenus In order to streamline the Python commands available when right-clicking on the editor, the Run Python File in Terminal and Run Selection/Line in Python Terminal commands are now submenu items under the Run Python entry. Automatic conversion of f-strings There's a new "python.analysis.autoFormatStrings" setting that enables automatic conversion of f-strings when using Pylance . Once enabled, Pylance will automatically insert an f at the beginning of a string when you insert { within quotes: The default value for this setting is currently disabled, but will be enabled in an upcoming release pending positive feedback. If you have any comments or suggestions regarding this feature, feel free to share them on the Pylance GitHub repository . Code navigation enabled on strings that contain paths There's another new experimental setting called "python.analysis.gotoDefinitionInStringLiteral" that enables Go to Definition from module-like string literals. This can be helpful if you're working on web applications, such as Django apps, and want to navigate to modules or paths defined in string literals: This new setting, like the autoFormatStrings setting mentioned earlier, is currently disabled by default. However, we plan to enable this behavior in a future release based on feedback. Eventually, we plan to remove this setting entirely. Jupyter Restart commands The Jupyter extension now includes two new commands, enabling the user to restart the kernel and run cells directly. The commands are Restart Kernel and Run All Cells and Restart Kernel and Run Up To Selected Cell , and can be accessed via the command IDs jupyter.restartkernelandrunallcells and jupyter.restartkernelandrunuptoselectedcell respectively. Reconnect to busy remote Jupyter kernels In previous releases, when connecting to a remote Jupyter kernel session, the Jupyter extension would wait for the kernel to be idle before connecting. This could take a long time if the kernel was busy running a long-running computation. In this release, the Jupyter extension connects to the kernel immediately, even if it is busy. This allows you to interrupt the kernel while it is busy. Platform-specific Jupyter extensions The Jupyter extension now ships platform-specific extensions , with each VSIX built for a specific platform (Windows 64 bit, Windows 32 bit, Linux x64, Alpine x64, macOS Intel, macOS Apple Silicon, etc.). The download size of the Jupyter extension for individual platforms is smaller, resulting in faster download times and less disk space usage. GitHub Pull Requests and Issues There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests and Issues extension, which allows you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. Highlights include: You can add team reviewers to a pull request. All of the places where you can Checkout default branch now respect the git.pullBeforeCheckout setting. GitHub's file level commenting is supported. Review the changelog for the 0.64.0 release of the extension to learn about the other highlights. GitHub Copilot Note : These features are available in the GitHub Copilot Chat extension. Chat editors Our first iteration on GitHub Copilot Chat enabled chat sessions in the sidebar. Now, we support opening the same chat view as an editor. This lets you customize the position of your chat session to be anywhere you want within your window layout. You can open a chat editor by running the command Interactive Session: Open Editor and then move it between editor groups just as you would with any other editor. Additional codeblock commands There are two new commands in the codeblock toolbar, Insert into New File and Run in Terminal . These are next to the existing commands Copy and Insert at Cursor , and give you extra options for quickly taking action on the code suggestions that are returned from Copilot. Code Actions and inline chat Editor chat sessions are now integrated with the Quick Fixes. Select the light bulb for a squiggle and there are options to fix or explain using Copilot. In addition to Code Actions, inline chat is now also available from the editor context menu. Inline chat modes There is now a setting to change the different modes of inline chat: inlineChat.editMode . The options are: live - Apply AI suggested changes directly to the editor (default). livePreview - Apply changes but renders them in an embedded diff editor. preview - Show changes in a disconnected, embedded diff editor. Similar commands in the Command Palette With the power of Copilot, the Command Palette is now able to show similar command results. To enable this, you must have an active Copilot subscription, be in the private preview of the chat view, and apply the setting: "workbench.commandPalette.experimental.useSemanticSimilarity" : true Here are some examples: "turn on autosave" being interpreted as Toggle Auto Save "add function" includes additional results at the bottom with contributions from extensions Lastly, if your results yield no results, you can Ask GitHub Copilot , which puts what's in your filter box in a new chat for Copilot to handle. We will be iterating in this space so stay tuned! Preview Features TypeScript 5.1 Support This update includes support for the upcoming TypeScript 5.1 release. Read the TypeScript 5.1 Beta blog post and TypeScript 5.1 iteration plan for more details on what the TypeScript team is currently working on. Some editor tooling highlights: Linked editing support for JSX tags. Snippet completions for @param JSDoc tags. To start using the TypeScript 5.1 nightly builds, install the TypeScript Nightly extension. Rename matching JSX tags using F2 When you trigger rename on a JSX tag, VS Code now renames just the matching tag instead of trying to update all references to the tag: This requires TypeScript 5.1+ and matches how rename works in HTML. You can disable this behavior using javascript.preferences.renameMatchingJsxTags and typescript.preferences.renameMatchingJsxTags . Extension authoring Workspace edits can now create files directly from DataTransferFile One of the primary uses of the drop into editor API is writing dropped files/content into the workspace. However in previous VS Code releases, this could be fairly slow for large files. This is because the file contents end up being copied between processes twice: first from the renderer to the extension host to read the file contents, and then back from the extension host to the renderer to write the file. class CreateFileDropProvider implements vscode . DocumentDropEditProvider { async provideDocumentDropEdits ( _document : vscode . TextDocument , _position : vscode . Position , dataTransfer : vscode . DataTransfer , _token : vscode . CancellationToken ): Promise < vscode . DocumentDropEdit | undefined > { const pngFile = dataTransfer . get ( 'image/png' )?. asFile (); if (! pngFile ) { return ; } // Read file // This results in the entire file contents being copied over to the extension host. const contents = await pngFile . data (); // Now create a workspace edit that writes the file into the workspace // This results in the same file contents from above being copied back again. const additionalEdit = new vscode . WorkspaceEdit (); const path = vscode . Uri . joinPath ( vscode . workspace . workspaceFolders ![ 0 ]. uri , 'image.png' ); additionalEdit . createFile ( path , { contents }); const edit = new vscode . DocumentDropEdit ( path . fsPath ); edit . additionalEdit = additionalEdit ; return edit ; } } Now you can avoid those extra copies though by passing a DataTransferFile directly to WorkspaceEdit.createFile : additionalEdit . createFile ( path , { contents: pngFile }); This should significantly improve performance, especially when working with larger files. Resolve Code Action commands in resolveCodeAction A CodeActionProvider can now lazily resolve the command of CodeAction in resolveCodeAction . Previously only the edits for the Code Action could be lazily resolved. If the command is expensive to compute, this allows a CodeActionProvider to defer this work until the Code Action is going to be applied. editor/lineNumber/context menu We have finalized the editor/lineNumber/context menu. This allows extension authors to contribute actions to a context menu anchored to the editor line number and glyph margin. Actions contributed to this menu receive the line number in command arguments and can reference the editorLineNumber context key in their when clauses. Authentication API improvements Authentication session preference is now workspace aware For authentication providers that support being signed into multiple accounts at once (like Microsoft), the user is prompted to select an account to use when vscode.authentication.getSession with createIfNone: true is called. Previous behavior: This preference is remembered until vscode.authentication.getSession is called with the ClearSessionPreference flag. New behavior: This preference is remembered per-workspace until vscode.authentication.getSession is called in that workspace with the ClearSessionPreference flag. This behavior was introduced to allow extensions to use different accounts for different workspaces and allow those preferences to be remembered. Note : The preference is extension specific. So if one extension calls vscode.authentication.getSession , it will not affect the session preference for another extension calling vscode.authentication.getSession . Microsoft Sovereign Cloud support in desktop This iteration, we introduced a new Authentication Provider into the core product: Microsoft Sovereign Cloud . This provider is for authenticating users to Microsoft Cloud for Sovereignty like Azure US Government, Azure China, etc. Under the hood, it works identically to the Microsoft auth provider, only with different URLs. If you want to use this auth provider, you can guide the user through setting the microsoft-sovereign-cloud.endpoint value, which has a couple of defaults but also supports custom Sovereign Cloud URLs as well. Keep in mind that most users do not have a Sovereign Cloud account. Our recommendation is that if you want to support Sovereign Clouds, you should make it possible for users to sign in via Sovereign Clouds, but not include it as part of the mainline workflow so as not to confuse users. Proposed APIs Every milestone comes with new proposed APIs and extension authors can try them out. As always, we want your feedback. Here are the steps to try out a proposed API: Find a proposal that you want to try and add its name to package.json#enabledApiProposals . Use the latest vscode-dts and run vscode-dts dev . It will download the corresponding d.ts files into your workspace. You can now program against the proposal. You cannot publish an extension that uses a proposed API. There may be breaking changes in the next release and we never want to break existing extensions. Format multiple ranges The DocumentRangeFormattingEditProvider API has an optional proposed function to support formatting multiple ranges at once. By adopting this API, providers improve the format modified ranges flow because only a single request to a language service is needed. Document drop metadata This new proposal enriches the existing drop into editor API to support the new drop selector . Providers can use it to provide a better drop into editor experience. The first part of this proposal adds a label property to DocumentDropEdit . This human readable label describes the edit and is shown in the drop selector UI: The second part adds an extra metadata argument to registerDocumentDropEditProvider . This metadata argument identifies the provider and tells VS Code the types of content it applies to: vscode . languages . registerDocumentDropEditProvider ( 'markdown' , new InsertBase64ImageProvider (), { // Unique id that identities this provider id: 'insertBase64Image' , // Array of mime types, such as `image/png` or `text/plain`, that this provider supports. // You can also use wildcards, such as `image/*` which matches any image content that is dropped. dropMimeTypes: [ 'image/*' ] } ); The dropMimeTypes array can help improve performance as your provider is only called for relevant dropped content. Engineering Electron 22 update In this milestone, we have finished our experiment with using a custom allocator for extension host and are ready to bundle Electron 22 into VS Code Desktop. We want to thank everyone involved with self-hosting on Insiders builds and provided early feedback. This update comes with Chromium 108.0.5359.215 and Node.js 16.17.1 . VS Code Day You can catch up on all the highlights from VS Code Day with the VS Code Day 2023 YouTube playlist. There you will find sessions on topics such as GitHub Copilot , Data Science , and TypeScript , as well as the Keynote by Erich Gamma and Kai Maetzel, where they explain how the team builds and ships VS Code. Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @starball5 (starball) @tamuratak (Takashi Tamura) @Kathund (Kath) @ArturoDent (ArturoDent) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @a-stewart (Anthony Stewart) : Support copying non-pngs and wait for focus to avoid race conditions PR #180322 @andrewbranch (Andrew Branch) : [typescript-language-features] Support replacing Go to Definition with Go to Source Definition by preference PR #178840 @c-claeys (Cristopher Claeys) : Add support for multiRange formatting PR #163190 @donaldnevermore (Donald33 Wang) : Support custom switch-case indentation PR #179670 @FlorentRevest (Florent Revest) : debug session: use queue to make sure debugee status get processed in correct order PR #180410 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) : Set a max-height on comments and add vertical scrolling (#_174629) PR #180044 @hermannloose (Hermann Loose) : Allow individual comments to be marked as draft PR #173305 @iliazeus (Ilia Pozdnyakov) : Add support for F20-F24 keys in keyboard shortcuts PR #179591 @jeanp413 (Jean Pierre) : Fixes configured default shell not used when connecting to remote PR #175844 @jjaeggli (Jacob Jaeggli) : Accessibility help dialog uses semantic markup for assistive technology PR #179726 @KapitanOczywisty : Update PHP grammar from fork PR #180100 @LakshyAAAgrawal (Lakshya A Agrawal) : Fix typo in vscode.d.ts PR #177377 @mahmoudsalah1993 (Mahmoud Salah) : Return the key correctly when having a single userDataProfileContentH… PR #178517 @Mai-Lapyst : Fix accidently starting all onTaskType extensions when running any task; fixes #175821 PR #178679 @maxmmyron (Max) : Fix: diff editor arrow click enables breakpoint PR #179130 @mblout (Michael Blout) : Add debug API for call stack selection changes (63943) PR #179132 @MonadChains (MonadChains) : Issue 151220/add current timezone offset variable PR #170518 @simon04 (Simon Legner) : terminalActions: "Open Last URL" PR #173217 @SimonSiefke (Simon Siefke) : fix: printing of extension id in mainThreadExtensionService PR #179553 @spahnke (Sebastian Pahnke) : [Monaco] Add monaco.editor.registerEditorOpener method to be able to intercept editor open operations PR #177064 @sumneko (最萌小汐) : Update Lua grammar PR #177798 @tisilent (xie jialong 努力鸭) : Fix #159471 PR #177961 @tomheaton (Tom Heaton) : Fix collapseAll command when no folder is open PR #180330 @weartist (Han) support to open both integrated terminal and external terminal with … PR #168879 Added support for breakpointWidget to automatically adapt to width wh… PR #179551 add confirmation before removing cell for #173481 PR #179776 @Wundero (Sam Riddle) : Use defined variable instead of internal property PR #178701 @yiliang114 (易良) fix: close #176763, modify the conditions to load vscode-web-playground PR #176771 chore: rename wrong service name PR #177954 fix: typos PR #179581 @YinDongFang (dongfang) : Fix 'Window' key is treated as 'unknown' in Firefox (#_175739) PR #175740 Contributions to vscode-js-debug : @markw65 : Fix the race for the javascript terminal too PR #1654 Contributions to vscode-json-languageservice : @zardoy (Vitaly) [completions] Always show details such as Default value PR #183 [completion] Don't suggest duplicates when uniqueItems: true PR #184 Contributions to vscode-pull-request-github : @Balastrong (Leonardo Montini) Add x button to remove a label from a new PR PR #4649 Change file mode for execute husky hook on MacOS PR #4695 @eastwood (Clinton Ryan) : Gracefully handle errors where the SSH configuration file is corrupt or malformed PR #4644 @kabel (Kevin Abel) Fix status checks rendering PR #4542 Make the display of PR number in tree view configurable PR #4576 Centralize all configuration strings into settingKeys.ts PR #4577 Move PullRequest to a shared location for reviewing of types PR #4578 @ypresto (Yuya Tanaka) : Fix wrong repo URL for nested repos in workspace (fix copy permalink) PR #4711 Contributions to monaco-editor : @dneto0 (David Neto) : Add WebGPU Shading Language tokenizer, with tests PR #3884 @kisstkondoros (Tamas Kiss) : Fix reference error in convert method of OutlineAdapter PR #3924 @tamayika : Change moduleResolution to node16 and adopt TS 5.0 PR #3860 Contributions to devcontainers/cli : @aaronlehmann (Aaron Lehmann) : Add support for Docker credential helpers PR #460 On this page there are 17 sections On this page Accessibility Workbench Editor Extensions Source Control Notebooks Languages Testing VS Code for the Web Remote Development Contributions to extensions Preview Features Extension authoring Proposed APIs Engineering VS Code Day Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_101 | May 2025 (version 1.101) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 May 2025 (version 1.101) Release date: June 12, 2025 Security update : The following extension has security updates: ms-python.python . Update 1.101.1 : The update addresses these issues . Update 1.101.2 : The update addresses these issues . Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the May 2025 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: MCP Expand your agent coding flow with support for prompts, resources, and sampling ( Show more ). Access MCP servers that require authentication ( Show more ). Debug MCP servers with development mode ( Show more ). Publish MCP servers from an extension ( Show more ). Chat Group and manage related tools by combining them in a tool set ( Show more ). Source Control View files in Source Control Graph view ( Show more ). Assign and track work for GitHub Copilot Coding Agent from within VS Code ( Show more ). If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Chat Chat tool sets VS Code now enables you to define tool sets, either through a proposed API or through the UI. A tool set is a collection of different tools that can be used just like individual tools. Tool sets make it easier to group related tools together, and quickly enable or disable them in agent mode. For instance, the tool set below is for managing GitHub notifications (using the GitHub MCP server ). { "gh-news" : { "tools" : [ "list_notifications" , "dismiss_notification" , "get_notification_details" ], "description" : "Manage GH notification" , "icon" : "github-project" } } To create a tool set, run the Configure Tool Sets > Create new tool sets file command from the Command Palette. You can then select the tools you want to include in the tool set, and provide a description and icon. To use a tool set in a chat query, reference it by #-mentioning its name, like #gh-news . You can also choose it from the tool picker in the chat input box. Learn more about tool sets in our documentation. MCP support for prompts VS Code's Model Context Protocol support now includes prompt support. Prompts can be defined by MCP servers to generate reusable snippets or tasks for the language model. Prompts are accessible as slash / commands in chat, in the format /mcp.servername.promptname . You can enter plain text or include command output in prompt variables, and we also support completions when servers provide it. The following example shows how we generate a prompt using AI, save it using the Gistpad MCP server , and then use it to generate a changelog entry: MCP support for resources VS Code's Model Context Protocol support now includes resource support, which includes support for resource templates. It is available in several places: Resources returned from MCP tool calls are available to the model and can be saved in chat, either via a Save button or by dragging the resource onto the Explorer view. Resources can be attached as context via the Add Context... button in chat, then selecting MCP Resources... . You can browse and view resources across servers using the MCP: Browse Resources command or for a server by its entry in the MCP: List Servers command. Here's an example of attaching resources from the Gistpad MCP server to chat: MCP support for sampling (Experimental) VS Code's Model Context Protocol support now includes sampling, which allows MCP servers to make requests back to the model. You'll be asked to confirm the first time an MCP server makes a sampling request, and you can configure the models the MCP server has access to as well as see a request log by selecting the server in MCP: List Servers. Sampling support is still preliminary and we plan to expand and improve it in future iterations. MCP support for auth VS Code now supports MCP servers that require authentication, allowing you to interact with an MCP server that operates on behalf of your user account for that service. This feature implements the MCP authorization specification for clients, and supports both: 2025-3-26 spec , where the MCP server behaves as an authorization server. Draft spec , where the MCP server behaves as a resource server (this is expected to be finalized any day now). If the MCP server implements the draft spec and leverages GitHub or Entra as the auth server, you can manage which MCP servers have access to your account: You can also manage which account that server should use (via the gear button in the previous quick pick): For other MCP servers that rely on dynamic client registration, we include the auth state in the same place as everything else, for example with Linear: There you can also sign out. For these we support not only the code authorization flow but also the device code flow should your authorization server support it. We have also introduced the command Authentication: Remove Dynamic Authentication Providers that allows you to clean up any of these dynamic client registrations. This will throw away the client id issued to VS Code and all data associated with this authentication provider. Remember, you can use the MCP: Add Server... command to add MCP servers. This is the same entry point for servers with authentication. MCP development mode You can enable development mode for MCP servers by adding a dev key to the server config. This is an object with two properties: watch : A file glob pattern to watch for files change that will restart the MCP server. debug : Enables you to set up a debugger with the MCP server. Currently, we only support debugging Node.js and Python servers launched with node and python respectively. .vscode/mcp.json { "servers": { "gistpad": { "command": "node", "args": ["build/index.js"], + "dev": { + "watch": "build/**/*.js", + "debug": { "type": "node" } + }, Chat UX improvements We're continuously working to improve the chat user experience in VS Code based on your feedback. One such feedback was that it can be difficult to distinguish between user messages and AI responses in the chat. To address this, we've made the appearance of user messages more distinct. Undoing previous requests is now also more visible - just hover over a request and select the X button to undo that request and any following requests. Or even quicker, use the ⌘Backspace (Windows, Linux Delete ) keyboard shortcut! Finally, attachments from the chat input box are now more navigable. Learn more about using chat in VS Code in our documentation. Apply edits more efficiently When editing files, VS Code can take two different approaches: it either rewrites the file top to bottom or it makes multiple, smaller edits. Both approaches differ, for example the former can be slower for large files and intermediate states do often not compile successfully. Because of that the UI adopts and conditionally disables auto-save and squiggles, but only when needed. We have also aligned the keybindings for the Keep and Undo commands. Keeping and undoing individual changes is now done with ⌘Y (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Y ) and ⌘N (Windows, Linux Ctrl+N ) . In the same spirit, we have also aligned the keybinding for keeping and undoing all changes in a file, they are now ⇧⌘Y (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+Y ) and ⇧⌘N (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+N ) . This is not just for alignment but also removes prior conflicts with popular editing commands (like Delete All Left ). Implicit context We've streamlined and simplified the way that adding your current file as context works in chat. Many people found the "eyeball toggle" that we previously had to be a bit clunky. Now, your current file is offered as a suggested context item. Just select the item to add or remove it from chat context. From prompt input field, press Shift+Tab, Enter to quickly do this with the keyboard. Additionally, in agent mode, we include a hint about your current editor. This doesn't include the contents of the file, just the file name and cursor position. The agent can then use the tools it has to read the contents of the file on its own, if it thinks that it's relevant to your query. Learn more about adding context in chat in our documentation. Fix task configuration errors Configuring tasks and problem matchers can be tricky. Use the Fix with Github Copilot action that is offered when there are errors in your task configuration to address them quickly and efficiently. Custom chat modes (Preview) By default, the chat view supports three built-in chat modes: Ask, Edit and Agent. Each chat mode comes with a set of base instructions that describe how the LLM should handle a request, as well as the list of tools that can be used for that. You can now define your own custom chat modes, which can be used in the Chat view. Custom chat modes allow you to tailor the behavior of chat and specify which tools are available in that mode. This is particularly useful for specialized workflows or when you want to provide specific instructions to the LLM. For example, you can create a custom chat mode for planning new features, which only has read-only access to your codebase. To define and use a custom chat mode, follow these steps: Define a custom mode by using the Chat: Configure Chat Modes command from the Command Palette. Provide the instructions and available tools for your custom chat mode in the *.chatprompt.md file that is created. In the Chat view, select the chat mode from the chat mode dropdown list. Submit your chat prompt. The following example shows a custom "Planning" chat mode: --- description : Generate an implementation plan for new features or refactoring existing code. tools : [ 'codebase' , 'fetch' , 'findTestFiles' , 'githubRepo' , 'search' , 'usages' ] --- # Planning mode instructions You are in planning mode. Your task is to generate an implementation plan for a new feature or for refactoring existing code. Don't make any code edits, just generate a plan. The plan consists of a Markdown document that describes the implementation plan, including the following sections: * Overview: A brief description of the feature or refactoring task. * Requirements: A list of requirements for the feature or refactoring task. * Implementation Steps: A detailed list of steps to implement the feature or refactoring task. * Testing: A list of tests that need to be implemented to verify the feature or refactoring task. Note : The feature is work in progress, but please try it out! Please follow the latest progress in VS Code Insiders and let us know what's not working or is missing. Task diagnostic awareness When the chat agent runs a task, it is now aware of any errors or warnings identified by problem matchers. This diagnostic context allows the chat agent to respond more intelligently to issues as they arise. Terminal cwd context When agent mode has opened a terminal and shell integration is active, the chat agent is aware of the current working directory (cwd). This enables more accurate and context-aware command support. Floating window improvements When you move a chat session into a floating window, there are now two new actions available in the title bar: Dock the chat back into the VS Code window where it came from Start a new chat session in the floating window. Fetch tool confirmation The fetch tool enables you to pull information from a web page. We have added a warning message to the confirmation to inform you about potential prompt injection. Customize more built-in tools It's now possible to enable or disable all built-in tools in agent mode or your custom mode. For example, disable editFiles to disallow agent mode to edit files directly, or runCommands for running terminal commands. In agent mode, select the Configure Tools button to open the tool picker, and select your desired set of tools. Some of the entries in this menu represent tool sets that group multiple tools. For example, we give the model multiple tools to edit or create text files and notebooks, which may also differ by model family, and editFiles groups all of these. Send elements to chat (Experimental) Last milestone, we added a new experimental feature where you could open the Simple Browser and select web elements to add to chat from the embedded browser. As we continue to improve this feature, we have added support for selecting web elements in the Live Preview extension as well. Check this out by downloading the extension and spinning up a live server from any HTML file. Accessibility User action required sound We’ve added an accessibility signal to indicate when chat requires user action. This is opt-in as we fine tune the sound. You can configure this behavior with accessibility.signals.chatUserActionRequired . New code action sounds We’ve introduced distinct sounds for: when a code action is triggered: accessibility.signals.codeActionTriggered when a code action is applied: accessibility.signals.codeActionApplied Agent mode accessibility improvements We now include rich information about confirmation dialogs in the accessible view, covering past tool runs, the current tool run, and any pending confirmations. This includes the inputs that will be used. When a confirmation dialog appears in a response, the action’s title is now included in the ARIA label of the corresponding code block, the response’s ARIA label, and the live alert to provide better context for screen reader users. Editor Experience Find as you type Setting : editor.find.findOnType Find-as-you-type has been the default behavior of the Find control, but now you can control whether to keep it that way or disable it so that it will only perform the search after hitting enter. Custom menus with native window title bar Setting : window.menuStyle You can now specify the menu style that is used for the menu bar and context menus on Windows and Linux, and for context menus on macOS by using the window.menuStyle setting: native : rendered by the OS custom : rendered by VS Code inherit : matches the style of the title bar as set by window.titleBarStyle (lets you use a native title bar with a custom menu bar and context menus). Linux native window context menu We now support the native window context menu when you right-click on the application icon in the custom title bar. Process explorer web support The process explorer was converted to use the floating window infrastructure that we have in the workbench for editor windows. As a result, this also means that we now support the process explorer in web when connected to a remote (for example in Codespaces). Windows shell environment discovery We have now implemented shell environment discovery for PowerShell on Windows. This means that VS Code inherits any environment configured in the PowerShell profiles, such as the PATH updates that Node.js configures through various version managers. Unpublished extension warning Installed extensions now show a warning indicator when they're no longer available in the Marketplace, helping you identify potentially problematic extensions that were unpublished or removed. Settings search suggestions (Preview) Setting : workbench.settings.showAISearchToggle This milestone, we added a toggle to the Settings editor that starts an AI search to find semantically similar results instead of results that are based on string matching. For example, the AI search finds the editor.fontSize setting when you search for "increase text size". To see the toggle, enable the setting and reload VS Code. We are also in the process of identifying and fixing some of the less accurate settings search results, and we welcome feedback on when a natural language query did not find an expected setting. For the next milestone, we are also considering removing the toggle and changing the experimental setting to one that controls when to directly append the slower AI search results to the end of the list. Search keyword suggestions (Preview) Setting : search.searchView.keywordSuggestions Last milestone, we introduced keyword suggestions in the Search view to help you find relevant results faster. We have now significantly improved the performance of the suggestions, so you will see the results ~5x faster than before. We have also moved the setting from the Chat extension into VS Code core, and renamed it from github.copilot.chat.search.keywordSuggestions to search.searchView.keywordSuggestions . Semantic search behavior options (Preview) Setting : search.searchView.semanticSearchBehavior With semantic search in the Search view, you can get results based on the meaning of your query rather than just matching text. This is particularly useful if you don't know the exact terms to search for. By default, semantic search is only run when you explicitly request it. We have now added a setting to control when you want semantic search to be triggered: manual (default): only run semantic search when triggered manually from the UI ( ⌘I (Windows, Linux Ctrl+I ) ) runOnEmpty : run semantic search automatically when the text search returns no results auto : always run semantic search in parallel with text search for every search query Edit Context Setting : editor.editContext We have enabled the editor.editContext setting by default on Stable. This means that the input of the editor is now powered by the EditContext API. This fixes numerous bugs, especially in relation to the IME experience, and going forward will pave the way for a more versatile and robust input experience within the editor. See the MDN docs for more detail on the EditContext API. Code Editing NES import suggestions Setting : github.copilot.nextEditSuggestions.fixes Last month, we introduced support for next edit suggestions to automatically suggest adding missing import statements for TypeScript and JavaScript. In this release, we've improved the accuracy and reliability of these suggestions and expanded support to Python files as well. NES is enabled for all VS Code Insiders users, and it will progressively be enabled by default for Stable users during June. You can enable NES yourself via its setting at any time. NES acceptance flow Accepting next edit suggestions is now more seamless with improved keyboard navigation. Once you accept a suggestion, you can continue accepting subsequent suggestions with a single Tab press, as long as you haven't started typing again. Once you start typing, press Tab to first move the cursor to the next suggestion before you can accept it. Notebooks Follow mode for agent cell execution Setting : github.copilot.chat.notebook.followCellExecution.enabled With follow mode, the Notebook view will automatically scroll to the cell that is currently being executed by the agent. Use the github.copilot.chat.notebook.followCellExecution.enabled setting to enable or disable follow mode for agent cell execution in Jupyter Notebooks. Once the agent has used the run cell tool, the Notebook toolbar is updated with a pin icon, indicating the state of follow mode. You can toggle the behavior mid agent response without changing the base setting value, allowing you to follow the work of the agent in real-time, and toggle it off when you want to review a specific portion of code while the agent continues to iterate. When you wish to follow again, simply toggle the mode, and join at the next execution. Notebook tools for agent mode Configure notebook The Jupyter extension contributes tools for configuring the Kernel of a Jupyter Notebook. This tool ensures that a Kernel is selected and is ready for use in the Notebook. This involves walking you through the process of creating a Virtual Environment if required (the recommended approach), or prompting you to select an existing Python environment. This tool ensures the LLM can perform operations on the Notebook such as running cells with minimal user interaction, thereby improving the overall user experience in agent mode. Long running agent workflows The agent has access to an internal Notebook Summary tool to help keep it on track with an accurate context. That summary is also included when summarizing the conversation history when the context gets too large to keep the agent going through complex operations. Cell preview in run confirmation A snippet of the code is shown from a notebook cell when the agent requests confirmation to run that cell. The cell links in the Chat view now also enable you to directly navigate to cells in the notebook. Source Control Copilot coding agent integration With Copilot coding agent, GitHub Copilot can work independently in the background to complete tasks, just like a human developer. We have expanded the GitHub Pull Requests extension to make it easier to assign and track tasks for the agent from within VS Code. We have added the following features to the extension: Assign to Copilot : assign a pull request or issue to Copilot from the issue or PR view in VS Code Copilot on My Behalf PR query: quickly see all pull requests that Copilot is working on for you. PR view : see the status of the Copilot coding agent and open the session details in the browser. Source control history item details Upon popular demand, selecting an item in the Source Control Graph view now reveals the resources of that history item. You can choose between a tree view or list view representation from the ... menu. To open all resources of a history item in the multi-file diff editor, use the Open Changes action on hover. Selecting a particular resource from the Graph view opens a diff editor only for that resource. Select the Open File action to open the file for that particular version. Add history item to chat context You can now add a source control history item as context to a chat request. This can be useful when you want to provide the contents of a specific commit or pull request as context for your chat prompt. To add a history item to chat, use Add Context > Source Control from the Chat view and then choose a particular history item. Alternatively, right-click the history item in the source control graph and then select Copilot > Add History Item to Chat from the context menu. Tasks Instance policy Task runOptions now has an instancePolicy property, which determines what happens when a task has reached its instanceLimit . Options include prompt (default), silent , terminateNewest , terminateOldest , and warn . Terminal Language server based terminal suggest Language server completions are now available in the terminal for interactive Python REPL sessions. This brings the same language completions you receive in the editor now inside the terminal. We are starting with support for Python via Pylance, with plans to expand to more languages in the future. To try it out, ensure the following settings are enabled: terminal.integrated.shellIntegration.enabled python.terminal.shellIntegration.enabled terminal.integrated.suggest.enabled python.analysis.supportAllPythonDocuments Remote Development The Remote Development extensions , allow you to use a Dev Container , remote machine via SSH or Remote Tunnels , or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. Highlights include: SSH pre-connection script Remote Explorer improvements You can learn more about these features in the Remote Development release notes . Contributions to extensions Python Python chat tools The Python Extension now includes the following chat tools: “Get information for a Python Environment”, “Get executable information for a Python Environment”, “Install Python Package” and “Configure Python Environment”. You can either directly reference them in your prompt by adding #getPythonEnvironmentInfo #installPythonPackage , or agent mode will automatically call the tool as applicable. These tools seamlessly detect appropriate environment information, based on file or workspace context, and handle package installation with accurate environment resolution. The “Configure Python Environment” tool ensures that the Python Environment is set up correctly for the workspace. This includes creating a Virtual Environment if needed, and selecting that as the active Python Environment for the workspace. Tools that were previously introduced in the Python Environments extension (preview) have been migrated to the Python extension, thereby making these tools available to all users with the Python extension installed. Create a project from a template The Python Environments extension now supports project creation for Python packages and basic scripts, allowing you to bypass scaffolding and get coding more quickly. Use the command Python Envs: Create Project from Template to select whether you want to create a package or a script. For package creation, you are able to name the package, create a virtual environment, and receive a scaffolded project which includes a tests subfolder, pyproject.toml , dev-requirements.txt , and boilerplate __main__.py and __init__.py files. For scripts, it creates a new python file with the name of your choice and include boilerplate code. PyEnv and Poetry support We added support for pyenv for environment management, and poetry for both package and environment management in the Python Environments extension. GitHub Pull Requests There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests extension, which enables you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. New features include: Images in comments from private repositories are now shown in pull request file comments. The "Notifications" view is now shown by default, collapsed. -- Issue and pull request links in the timeline an in the issue/pull request body are now opened in VS Code, rather than going to the browser. The "Assigned to Me" query in the "Pull Requests" view has been removed, and the "Local Pull Request Branches" and "All Open" queries can be removed using the setting githubPullRequests.queries . For repositories with Copilot, a "Copilot on My Behalf" query is added when the setting is unconfigured. Copilot "start working", "stop working", and "View Session" are now shown in the timeline. Review the changelog for the 0.112.0 release of the extension to learn about the other highlights. Extension Authoring MCP extension APIs Extensions can now publish collections of MCP servers. This enables you to bundle MCP servers with your extension or build extensions that dynamically discover MCP servers from other sources. Learn more in our MCP extension development guide or by checking out the MCP extension sample . Secret scanning when packaging extensions VSCE now scans for secrets when packaging your extension. If any potential secrets (for example, API keys, tokens, credentials, or environment variable files like .env ) are detected in your source files, VSCE displays an error during the packaging process. This helps you avoid accidentally publishing sensitive information to the Marketplace. Make sure to review and address any error before publishing your extension. If you need to bypass specific checks, you can use the --allow-package-secrets <secret_type> or --allow-package-env-file flags when running VSCE. These flags let you configure which secret or environment file checks should be skipped during packaging. Web environment detection ⚠️ Breaking change ⚠️ Setting : extensions.supportNodeGlobalNavigator The Node.js extension host is now updated to v22 from v20, as part of our Electron 35 runtime update . This update brings in support for the navigator global object in the desktop and remote extension hosts. This change could introduce a breaking change for extensions that rely on the presence of the navigator object to detect the web environment. To help extension authors migrate, we have created a polyfill for globalThis.navigator that is initialized to undefined , so your extension continues to work correctly. The polyfill is behind the extensions.supportNodeGlobalNavigator VS Code setting. By default, this setting is disabled and the polyfill is in place. We capture telemetry and log an error (in extension development mode) when your extension tries to access the navigator in this way. In the future, this setting might be enabled by default, so we urge extension authors to migrate their code to be compatible with the new navigator global object. Follow these steps to migrate your code: Check the extension host log for a PendingMigrationError that has error stack originating your extension. Ensure checks like typeof navigator === 'object' are migrated to typeof process === 'object' && process.versions.node as needed. Enable extensions.supportNodeGlobalNavigator . Verify extension behavior remains unchanged. Proposed APIs Authentication Providers: Supported Authorization Servers for MCP Currently only leveraged in MCP authentication , this API proposal enables your AuthenticationProvider to declare the authorization servers that are associated with it. For example, if you look at the GitHub Authentication Provider, it includes the typical GitHub authorization URL in the authorizationServerGlobs property of the auth provider contribution : { "label" : "GitHub" , "id" : "github" , "authorizationServerGlobs" : [ "https://github.com/login/oauth" ] } This property is used for activation of your extension - if the requested authorization server matches, your extension will be activated. Additionally, when registering the authentication provider, you MUST include the finalized authorization server URL globs. Just like what GitHub Authentication does here : vscode . authentication . registerAuthenticationProvider ( type , this . _githubServer . friendlyName , this , { supportsMultipleAccounts: true , supportedAuthorizationServers: [ ghesUri ?? vscode . Uri . parse ( 'https://github.com/login/oauth' ) ] } ); For a more complex example, look to Microsoft Authentication. The authorization server depends on the tenant being placed in the path. So for this, we use a wildcard in the contribution : { "label" : "Microsoft" , "id" : "microsoft" , "authorizationServerGlobs" : [ "https://login.microsoftonline.com/*/v2.0" ] }, and in the registration : authentication . registerAuthenticationProvider ( 'microsoft' , 'Microsoft' , authProvider , { supportsMultipleAccounts: true , supportedAuthorizationServers: [ Uri . parse ( 'https://login.microsoftonline.com/*/v2.0' )] }); Then, when a caller passes in an authorization server URL when it asks for auth, it is passed down to both the getSessions and createSession functions via the AuthenticationProviderSessionOptions that are already present. As mentioned, this functionality is currently used in MCP support, where we receive the authorization server URL to authenticate with from the MCP server. That URL is then mapped to an auth provider, or if none exists, an auth provider is dynamically created for that auth server. The full API proposal can be found in the vscode repo and we'd love to hear your feedback in the GitHub issue ! Engineering Electron 35 update In this milestone, we are promoting the Electron 35 update to users on our Stable release. This update comes with Chromium 134.0.6998.205 and Node.js 22.15.1. We want to thank everyone who self-hosted on Insiders builds and provided early feedback. Adopting ESM in a real-world extension Last milestone, we have announced support for JavaScript-modules (ESM). This enables extensions to use import and export statements, but currently only when targeting the NodeJS extension host. This month, we have done a real-world adoption with GitHub Issue Notebooks . It is not trivial because this extension can be run in the NodeJS extension host (which supports ESM extensions) and the web worker extension host, which currently does not support ESM extensions. This required a more complex bundler configuration and you might want to take inspiration from its esbuild-config . Notable fixes 250077 - Tree-Sitter based syntax highlighting depends on the model service Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @albertosantini (Alberto Santini) @RedCMD (RedCMD) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @alpalla (Alessio Palladino) : Add a task instancePolicy to task runOptions PR ##117129 @0xEbrahim (Ebrahim El-Sayed) : Fix Typo and Grammar PR #248814 @a-stewart (Anthony Stewart) : For editor font choice, if OS is not detected assume Linux PR #248133 @adnval (kevin) : Add installed filter PR #248055 @bhack : Add to new source format and the mandatory signed-by PR #239390 @dylanchu : TerminalTaskSystem: Add support for nushell PR #238440 @eronnen (Ely Ronnen) make maximum number of lines in debug console configurable PR #245915 Update log tmLanguage from vscode-logfile-highlighter 3.4.1 PR #249046 Disassembly View: don't display invalid memory instructions PR #249779 disasembly view: handle negative line height returned by debug adapter PR #250081 @gabritto (Gabriela Araujo Britto) : [typescript-language-features] Add configuration for maximum hover length PR #248181 @hickford (M Hickford) : Highlight active line number correctly regardless of word wrap PR #240029 @imfing (Xin) : fix: conditionally append scope parameter in authorization URL for DynamicAuthProvider PR #250084 @jeanp413 (Jean Pierre) Fix timeline git requests are not cancelled when switching editors too fast PR #244335 Fix vscode.env.onDidChangeShell not firing in the webworker extension host PR #249824 @joyceerhl (Joyce Er) refactor: reuse chat attachment widgets in chat list renderer PR #248163 fix: register widgets in chat attachments content part PR #249054 fix: set content reference description on historical chat attachments PR #249112 fix: use markdown string for MCP tool confirmation PR #249497 fix: allow Continue On if edit session identity provider mutates edit session payload PR #250057 @JoyceGu (Joyce Gu) : Joycegu/add genai packages 05222025 PR #249589 @mawosoft (Matthias Wolf) : Fix PowerShell shell integration when strict mode is enabled. PR #248625 @mortalYoung (野迂迂) : fix(search): fix expand all not working PR #248207 @nojaf (Florian Verdonck) : Close all unused ports command PR #244245 @nomike (nomike) : Enhance GithHub publishing logic to handle renamed repositories PR #245024 @Parasaran-Python (Parasaran) : Fix #248222 | Regex changes to allow multiple leading dots in relative paths PR #248340 @pelmers-db (Peter Elmers) : Fix cancellation logic in Picker onDidChangeValue handler (fixes #247945) PR #247946 @randy3k (Randy Lai) : Update upstream repo for R syntax PR #248880 @rbuckton (Ron Buckton) : Add casts to silence breaks due to updated DOM types PR #248346 @RedCMD (RedCMD) : Support @builtin @disabled PR #235885 @xzakharov (Oleksandr Zakharov) : fix(devcontainer): bump rust feature to fix container build PR #250430 @y0sh1ne (y0sh1ne) : Fix Copy Message with multiple selections (#_247927) PR #248172 Contributions to vscode-copilot-release : @joyceerhl (Joyce Er) : chore: update bug report template PR #9702 Contributions to vscode-css-languageservice : @Legend-Master (Tony) : Add basic media query auto complete support PR #443 @rgant (J Rob Gant) feature:(#_305) Add support for oklab and oklch color functions PR #436 Remove extra characters PR #437 refactor: Extend the base tsconfig.json PR #438 Contributions to vscode-custom-data : @Legend-Master (Tony) : Add media query support PR #118 Contributions to vscode-eslint : @MariaSolOs (Maria José Solano) Add eslint.codeActionsOnSave.options PR #1999 Add all possible flat configuration extensions PR #2017 Contributions to vscode-generator-code : @SamB (Samuel Bronson) : Do not link to top of vscode docs PR #518 Contributions to vscode-js-debug : @kdy1 (Donny/강동윤) : chore: Fix default url for turbopack PR #2223 @mikaelwaltersson (Mikael Waltersson) : Fix bug where the WasmWorker instance is disposed but never re-spawned on page reloads + writeMemory when WASM memory is SharedArrayBuffer PR #2211 Contributions to vscode-jupyter : @WillHirsch : Downgrade diagnostic severity for use of bang instead of percent for package installs PR #16601 Contributions to vscode-languageserver-node : @martijnwalraven (Martijn Walraven) : Fix workspace/textDocumentContent/refresh request PR #1637 Contributions to vscode-markdown-tm-grammar : @Barros1902 (Tomás Barros ) : Fix strikethrough with underscores in Markdown syntax (Fixes microsoft#173) PR #174 Contributions to vscode-prompt-tsx : @joyceerhl (Joyce Er) : chore: npm audit fix PR #175 Contributions to vscode-pull-request-github : @kabel (Kevin Abel) : Allow verified GitHub emails when none are private PR #6921 Contributions to vscode-python-debugger : @kycutler (Kyle Cutler) : Fix TypeError from trying to read directory PR #692 Contributions to debug-adapter-protocol : @DrSergei : Fix some typos PR #543 @robertoaloi (Roberto Aloi) : Add Erlang EDB Debugger PR #544 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @asukaminato0721 (Asuka Minato) add caddy PR #2131 add kdl PR #2139 @brynne8 (Brynne Taylor) : fix typo in glob pattern spec PR #2132 @leon-bckl (Leon) : Added c++20 lsp-framework PR #2144 @nieomylnieja (Mateusz Hawrus) : chore: Add Nobl9 VSCode extension to servers.md PR #2136 @zonuexe (USAMI Kenta) : Add LSP clients for Emacs PR #2145 Contributions to lsprotocol : @debonte (Erik De Bonte) Update to latest LSP spec PR #420 Rewrite release pipeline to use MicroBuild rather than vscode's templates PR #421 Change pyproject.toml version to 2025.0.0rc1 PR #422 @myleshyson (Myles Hyson) : Add golang to plugin table PR #418 On this page there are 15 sections On this page Chat Accessibility Editor Experience Code Editing Notebooks Source Control Tasks Terminal Remote Development Contributions to extensions Extension Authoring Proposed APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_93 | August 2024 (version 1.93) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. 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Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap Welcome to the August 2024 release of Visual Studio Code. There are many updates in this version that we hope you'll like, some of the key highlights include: Profiles editor - Switch and manage your profiles from a single place. Django unit test support - Discover and run Django unit tests from the Test Explorer. IntelliSense on vscode.dev - Boost your JS & TS coding in vscode.dev with IntelliSense. Notebook diff viewer - Efficiently review changes in notebooks by collapsing unchanged cells. Resize columns via the keyboard - Resizing table columns in VS Code more accessible via keyboard. Source Control Graph - Easily hide, collapse, or move the Source Control Graph. GitHub Copilot - Add context in Quick Chat, improved test generation and chat history. Experiment: Custom Copilot instructions - Define specific code-generation instructions for Copilot. If you'd like to read these release notes online, go to Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Want to try new features as soon as possible? You can download the nightly Insiders build and try the latest updates as soon as they are available. Accessibility Resize table columns via the keyboard A new command, list.resizeColumn , enables you to resize columns by using the keyboard. When you trigger this command, select the column you want to resize and provide a percentage of the width you want to set. The following video shows how to apply this to resize a column in the Keyboard Shortcuts editor. Screen reader support for synthesizing chat responses We've updated the accessibility.voice.autoSynthesize setting to enable screen reader users to opt in to hearing chat responses announced by our synthesizer, instead of getting aria alerts. Debugging improvements When you're debugging with the focus in an editor, invoking the Debug: Add to Watch command now announces the variable's value for screen reader users. Additionally, the Debug accessibility help dialog was improved for better thoroughness. Workbench New Profiles editor The new Profiles editor is now generally available for all in Visual Studio Code. The new Profiles editor enables you to manage profiles from a single place. This experience includes creating new profiles, editing and deleting existing profiles, and importing and exporting profiles to share with others. For more information, see the Profiles documentation . Linux support for window control overlays A new setting window.experimentalControlOverlay enables native window controls to appear, even when a custom title bar is enabled via the window.titleBarStyle setting. Out of the box, we have not yet enabled the custom title by default on Linux, but we plan to do so eventually. Once you turn on a custom title, native window control overlays will appear automatically. We welcome any feedback you find when using this new feature! Comments sorting Comments can now be sorted by their position in the file or by date. Copy settings URL from Settings editor You can copy a direct URL to a specific setting from the Settings editor. When you navigate to the settings URL, it opens VS Code and focuses the corresponding setting in the Settings editor. Reverse sort in Explorer We added an additional sort option, explorer.sortOrderReverse , which enables you to reverse any of the various Explorer sort configurations, providing further sorting flexibility. Editor Lightbulb improvements In the previous milestone, we improved the location where the Code Actions lightbulb icon is shown. We've now decided to set editor.lightbulb.enabled to onCode by default. This means that the lightbulb icon is only shown when the cursor is on lines with source code and will show up less frequently. Color theming for action lists The color of the action list control, such as the Code Action menu, can be configured by themes with the editorActionList.background , editorActionList.foreground , editorActionList.focusForeground , and editorActionList.focusBackground keys. By default, the action list control theme matches that of the Quick Pick and Command Palette. Get more info about customizing a color theme . GitHub Copilot This milestone, we continued to improve the GitHub Copilot experience in VS Code, across the editor, the Chat view, and inline Chat. We've also added several experimental features for you to try and for which we'd like to get your feedback. Improved test generation With GitHub Copilot, you can generate tests for your code, either by using the Generate Tests using Copilot action in the editor content menu, or by using the /tests slash command in inline Chat. We improved the test generation flow by looking for an existing test file and generating the new tests into that file, appending them at the end. If there isn't a test file yet, Copilot creates a new test file for the generated tests. Renamed Code Actions for generating tests and documentation When you place the cursor on an identifier, such as a method name, GitHub Copilot gives you Code Actions to generate tests or documentation. To better reflect their purpose, we renamed these Code Actions to Generate Tests using Copilot and Generate Documentation using Copilot . Previously, these were called Test using Copilot and Document using Copilot . Improved chat history You can open previous chat sessions from the chat history with the Show Chats button at the top of the Chat view. These sessions now have a more user-friendly, AI-generated name. You can also rename sessions manually by selecting the pencil icon on each row. These chat history entries are now also sorted by the date of their last request, and are labeled and grouped by date buckets. Note: Only new chat sessions get the AI-generated name, any chat sessions that you already had won't be renamed. Save chat sessions for empty windows Previously, VS Code wasn't saving chat sessions for empty windows (that don't have a folder or workspace open). Now, these sessions are saved as expected, and previous chats from an empty window can be loaded via the Show Chats button. Note : You should avoid opening and using the same chat session in multiple empty windows simultaneously. Attach context in Quick Chat When using Quick Chat, you can now use the Attach Context action to attach context like files and symbol to your Copilot request. Thumbs down feedback details Did you get a response from Copilot Chat that wasn't what you expected? Help us out by selecting the Thumbs down button on the toolbar for a chat response. Now, it shows a dropdown with a few detailed options for you to describe the issue. You can also open the issue reporter from this menu. Code generation instructions (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.experimental.codeGeneration.instructions Copilot can help you generate code, for example as part of a refactoring, generating unit tests, or implementing a feature. And you might have specific libraries you want to use, or a particular coding style you want to follow for the code that Copilot generates. The experimental setting github.copilot.chat.experimental.codeGeneration.instructions lets you define a set of instructions that are added to every Copilot request that generates code. The instructions can be defined in the User or Workspace settings but can also be imported from a file. The following code snippet shows how to define a set of instructions from both settings and an external file: "github.copilot.chat.experimental.codeGeneration.instructions" : [ { "text" : "Always add a comment: 'Generated by Copilot'." }, { "text" : "In TypeScript always use underscore for private field names." }, { "file" : "code-style.md" // import instructions from file `code-style.md` } ], Content of myProject/code-style.md : Always use React functional components. Always add comments. In the screenshot, you can see from the references section that the instructions were used: Automatic chat participant detection in Chat view (Experimental) Setting : chat.experimental.detectParticipant.enabled GitHub Copilot has several built-in chat participants, such as @workspace , which also contribute commands to the Chat view. Previously, you had to explicitly specify the chat participant and command in a chat prompt. To make it easier to use chat participants with natural language, in the coming weeks, we're experimenting with enabling Copilot Chat to automatically route your question to a suitable participant or chat command. If the automatically selected participant is not appropriate for your question, you can select the rerun without link at the top of the chat response to resend your question to Copilot. Use recent coding files as Inline Chat context (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.experimental.temporalContext.enabled Often, when you're prompting Copilot, you're asking a question related to code you were just working on or looking at. Inline Chat can now use recently seen or edited code as context to provide more relevant suggestions. This functionality is still experimental but also good to be tested by everyone. Use current editor line as inline Chat prompt (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.config.experimental.inlineChatCompletionTrigger.enabled Instead of first opening inline Chat and then entering your chat prompt, you can now start typing in the editor and use the contents of the current line directly as the prompt for inline Chat. And for an even smoother chat experience, Copilot can detect when you're prompting instead of writing code, and then automatically start inline Chat for you. The different ways in which you can use the current line as your prompt for inline Chat are the following: Enter Inline Chat: Start in Editor with Current Line from the Command Palette ( ⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P ) ) Configure a keybinding for the inlineChat.startWithCurrentLine command, combine it with the inlineChatExpansion context key Enable the github.copilot.config.experimental.inlineChatCompletionTrigger.enabled setting, so that Copilot detects that the current line has mostly text instead of source code, and then starts inline Chat. The following video shows how Copilot suggests starting inline Chat after it detects that there's mostly text on the current line. Start debugging from Chat (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.advanced.startDebugging.experimental.enabled A new experimental slash command, /startDebugging , is available on the @vscode chat participant. This command enables you to create a launch configuration and start debugging your app. You can also access this command through the Generate Debug Configuration with GitHub Copilot option in the Create a launch.json Quick Pick. Generate tests based on test coverage (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.experimental.generateTests.codeLens If test coverage information is available, GitHub Copilot can offer a CodeLens Generate tests using Copilot for functions and methods that are not yet covered by tests. Languages Renamed "SQL" to "MS SQL" The language name for SQL files has been renamed from "SQL" to "MS SQL" to better reflect the language's focus on Microsoft SQL Server (T-SQL) syntax. The file extension for this language mode is still .sql and the syntax highlighting remains unchanged. Full project Intellisense and package typings on vscode.dev Working with JavaScript and TypeScript on VS Code for the Web just got a whole lot better. To start off, we've implemented package IntelliSense, so you can see suggestions and documentation from any imported package, such as react . This works much like it does in the desktop version of VS Code. In TypeScript files, we offer IntelliSense for packages listed in your package.json . JavaScript files are a little more flexible and use automatic type acquisition , which offers IntelliSense for any package imported into the current file, even if it's not listed in the package.json . Thanks to package IntelliSense, we've also enabled full project IntelliSense for JavaScript and TypeScript projects. This greatly improves navigation through code, letting you correctly Go to Definition and Find All References to any symbol in your project. It also enables type error reporting. We now even support auto-imports while writing code. Package typings and full project IntelliSense are supported in Chrome, Microsoft Edge, and Firefox. Safari is not yet supported, as it does not implement ReadableByteStreamController . Source Control Source Control Graph view Based on user feedback, we have moved the history graph that was enabled last milestone from the Source Control view into a new view called Source Control Graph . This reduces the information overload from the main view and enables you to hide/collapse/move the new view as you see fit. This also lays the foundation for a full-featured history graph. The Source Control Graph view currently shows the remote/base for the current branch. In the next milestone, we are working on adding the capability to filter the graph to any repository reference, and improving the experience for workspaces with multiple repositories. Theme: GitHub Sharp (preview on vscode.dev ) Support for reftable format Git 2.45 added preliminary support for the new reference storage backend called "reftable". This milestone, we updated the built-in Git extension to support this new reference storage backend. Using Git 2.45, you can either create or clone a repository that uses the new reference storage backend with the --ref-format=reftable flag. Git 2.46 also added support for migrating an existing repository to use the new reference storage format by using the git refs migrate command. Please note that the new reference storage backend is still considered experimental. Compact folders setting Thanks to a community contribution, we have added a new setting, scm.compactFolders , to control whether folders are rendered in compact form in the Source Control view when changes are viewed as a tree. Terminal Julia and NuShell support There's now shell integration support for Julia and NuShell. This enables features such as command decorations and run recent command for these shell types. Move multiple terminal tabs You can now multi-select terminal tabs and move them around the list of terminals as an ordered group. Command guide setting and color theming The command guide is a bar that shows up beside a command and its output when hovered. You can now disable the command guide with the terminal.integrated.shellIntegration.showCommandGuide setting and the color can be configured by themes with the terminalCommandGuide.foreground theme key. Notebooks Show or hide unchanged cells in the diff view The notebook diff view now hides unchanged cells, which enables you to focus on the changed cells. At the same time, the input of all unchanged cells is always collapsed. Manage whitespace in the diff view The notebook diff view now respects the following setting: diffEditor.ignoreTrimWhitespace - Ignore leading and trailing (trim) whitespace when showing differences. Sticky Scrolling for Notebook execution count The execution count of a code cell now sticks to the bottom of the screen when scrolling down a code cell. This makes it easier to see the execution state and update when working in a long code cell. Tasks Keep task terminal open on process exit If a task's terminal process exits with a nonzero code, we now keep the terminal open for easier debugging. Debug Jump to variable definition Debug extensions can now link variables and expressions to locations in your code. Data with this link are Ctrl -selectable ( Cmd -selectable on macOS) in the Variables view, Watch view, and Debug Console. The built-in JavaScript debugger will link locations of functions defined in your code¸ Other debug extensions need to adopt the corresponding protocol change to enable this feature. Find control You can now open the Find control in the Debug Console ( ⌥⌘F (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Alt+F ) ) to search for results in the input. Support for searching results in the output will be investigated in future milestones. You can also access the control via the action Debug Console: Focus Find that appears on the Debug Console's toolbar to the right of the Filter control. Launch config input cache Input variables used in launch configurations and tasks now persist their last entered value to ease the process of rerunning debug sessions that depend on them. This is only done if there is no explicit default defined on the input. JavaScript Debugger Experimental Network view The JavaScript debugger now includes a basic, experimental Network view that is available when the debug.javascript.enableNetworkView setting is turned on. The view displays information about requests and responses made by browser sessions. Theme: Codesong (preview on vscode.dev ) The Network view also works for Node.js 22.6.0 and above when the process is launched with --experimental-network-inspection in its arguments, such as by adding "runtimeArgs": ["--experimental-network-inspection"] into a node launch configuration. Note : Node's implementation of networking is still very early and most data around requests and responses is not yet available. Testing Support for stack traces on messages Testing extensions can now associate a stack trace with test failures. When they do, you'll see the code around each frame of the call stack in the Test Results view and in error peeks. You can Ctrl -select ( Cmd -select on macOS) on code in the views to go to their original locations, or use the Go to File action on their headers. Theme: Codesong (preview on vscode.dev ) Installer The Debian package now prompts you to confirm whether you want to add the packages.microsoft.com repository. This enables you to update the package afterwards by using apt. Remote Development The Remote Development extensions , allow you to use a Dev Container , remote machine via SSH or Remote Tunnels , or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. Highlights include: Optional paths for Dev Container Templates Expanded compatibility for remote OSes with SSH You can learn more about these features in the Remote Development release notes . VS Code for the Web The git.openDiffOnClick setting is now honored when browsing a GitHub repository on https://vscode.dev or on the desktop with the GitHub Repositories extension . Contributions to extensions Python Django unit test support We are excited to announce support for one of our most requested features : you can now discover and run Django unit tests through the Test Explorer! For set up instructions on how to enable this functionality, check our documentation . Theme: Catppuccin Macchiato (preview on vscode.dev ) As you explore this newly added feature, please provide feedback and report any issues in our vscode-python repo or by using the Python: Report Issue command. Native REPL improvements We made more improvements and bug fixes to the new Native REPL experience. We are rolling out the native REPL as the default target for Smart Send as an experiment, but if you are interested in trying this out, you can set python.REPL.sendToNativeREPL in your User settings.json and reload your VS Code window. Go to definition from inlay hints with Pylance When inlay hints are enabled with Pylance, you can now more conveniently navigate to a type's definition by hovering over it and clicking while holding Ctrl ( Cmd on macOS): Restart support when debugging tests You can now restart the debugger when debugging tests through the Debug toolbar control. GitHub Pull Requests and Issues There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests extension, which enables you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. Review the changelog for the 0.96.0 release of the extension to learn about the highlights. Extension authoring Impact of EcmaScript Module (ESM) Loading of VS Code We are in the process of changing how our code is loaded in VS Code core, away from AMD/CommonJS to ESM. Extensions will continue to load as CommonJS, but this change comes with change to the require method: Specifically, require.main will be undefined beginning with our 1.94 release. If you have a usecase for accessing a file from the installation, please consider vscode.env.appRoot instead or reach out to us . Terminal shell integration API The terminal shell integration API is now available to use. This powerful API enables an extension to listen to commands run in terminals, read their raw output, exit code, and command lines. window . onDidEndTerminalShellExecution ( event => { if ( event . execution . commandLine . value . startsWith ( 'git' )) { if ( event . exitCode === 0 ) { // React to a successful git command } else { // React to a failing git command } } }); It also provides a more reliable way to execute a command, which will wait for a prompt to start before sending the command, preventing the command to be echoed to the terminal an extra time. const commandLine = 'echo "Hello world"' ; if ( term . shellIntegration ) { const execution = shellIntegration . executeCommand ({ commandLine }); window . onDidEndTerminalShellExecution ( event => { if ( event . execution === execution ) { console . log ( `Command exited with code ${ event . exitCode } ` ); } }); } else { term . sendText ( commandLine ); // Without shell integration, we can't know when the command has finished or what the // exit code was. } See the API in vscode.d.ts and the extension sample for more information. Terminal.shellIntegration window.onDidChangeTerminalShellIntegration window.onDidStartTerminalShellExecution window.onDidEndTerminalShellExecution Authentication account API The authentication APIs now have more control when handling multiple accounts. Something that has always been missing is the ability to get all accounts and get an AuthenticationSession for a specific account. That is now possible with the finalization of the getAccounts API. Extension authors looking to consume authentication sessions can run the following code to get the AuthenticationSessionAccountInformation of the accounts that the user is logged into: const accounts = vscode . authentication . getAccounts ( 'microsoft' ); From there, you can use those accounts to mint sessions specifically for those accounts: const session = vscode . authentication . getSession ( 'microsoft' , scopes , { account: accounts [ 0 ] }); Note : For this to work, the authentication provider needs to handle a parameter that is passed in to both getSessions and createSession . The built-in GitHub and Microsoft providers have already adopted this. We believe that this is the clearest way to handle multiple authentication sessions and also handle various scenarios that we couldn't support before. Debug Adapter Protocol We added locationReferences to Variables and other data types in the Debug Adapter Protocol , to enable associating a source location. WebAssemblies in VS Code The 1.0 versions of the wasm-wasi-core extension together with the @vscode-wasm-wasi and @vscode/wasm-component-model npm modules have been released. Usage samples can be found in the vscode-extension-samples repository in the wasm-* sub folders. There are also several posts about how to use WebAssembly code inside a VS Code extension on the VS Code blog . Preview Features Terminal IntelliSense improvements Experimental PowerShell IntelliSense got the following improvements this release: git checkout now includes a completion for - to switch to the previous branch. The default value for terminal.integrated.suggest.runOnEnter is now set to ignore, which means Enter does not interact at all with IntelliSense. This was feedback from users who found the impact on muscle memory too disruptive. PowerShell keywords are now available as completions for the command (not args). The cd first directory suggestion is now always itself, which makes things smoother when terminal.integrated.suggest.runOnEnter is set. Suggestions are more consistent now when requested at different positions on the command line. A completion is provided for <path>/../ when navigating back directories. Conpty shipping in product Conpty is the backend for the terminal that emulates how pseudoterminals work on other operating systems. This component is shipped in Windows itself, which means that bug fixes are released via Windows Update. Users might end up waiting a long time for these fixes to arrive. This release, we have an experimental setting that bundles conpty with VS Code itself, similar to how Windows Terminal does it. This means that users can get bug fixes as we ship updates to VS Code instead of waiting on Windows updates. To enable this, set the following setting to true : "terminal.integrated.experimental.windowsUseConptyDll" : true The type of improvements you should expect for enabling this are: Better performance More reliable shell integration More escape sequence support (for example sixel support on Windows soon) The only currently known issue is that some users have a process that sticks around and blocks VS Code updates ( microsoft/vscode#225719 ), which requires manually killing the process to enable updates. TypeScript 5.6 support We continued improving our support for the upcoming TypeScript 5.6 release. Check out the TypeScript 5.6 RC blog post for details on what this release includes. To start using preview builds of TypeScript 5.6, install the TypeScript Nightly extension . New Issue Reporter implementation This milestone, we are experimenting with a new implementation of the Issue Reporter. The functionality remains the same, but there should be a few improvements, such as improved multi-monitor support, and the availability of the Issue Reporter in VS Code for the Web. The new version of the Issue Reporter is enabled by default and can be configured with the issueReporter.experimental.auxWindow setting in desktop versions of VS Code. Proposed APIs Tools for language models We continue to iterate on our LanguageModelTool API. The API comes with two major parts: The ability for extensions to register a tool . A tool is a piece of functionality that is meant to be used by language models. For example, reading the Git history of a file. The mechanics for language models to support tools, such as extensions passing tools when making a request, language models requesting a tool invocation, and extensions communicating back the result of a tool invocation. One of the changes this month adds is the ability for the user to manually attach certain tools to their chat request. An example of this would be for a tool that computes some dynamic context that the user wants to use in their request. The proposal can be found as vscode.proposed.lmTools.d.ts . Check out the tool-user sample extension that demonstrates registering and calling tools. Watch issue #213274 for updates or to give us feedback. Note : The API is still under active development, and things will change. Testing enhancements Associate code to tests We're working on an API that enables an extension to associate code to tests, and vice versa. This lets users jump between both, and enables actions, such as Run Tests at Cursor , to also work in implementation code. We anticipate building more experiences as the API develops. Check out vscode#126932 for more information and updates. Attributable test coverage We're working on an API for attributing test coverage on a per-test basis. This enables users to see which tests ran which code, filtering both the coverage shown in the editor, and that in the Test Coverage view. Check out vscode#212196 for more information and updates. Chat participant detection API If you're authoring an extension that contributes participants or chat commands to the Chat view, you can enable your participants and commands to be automatically detected by adding metadata to your chatParticipants contribution in package.json . We have updated the vscode-extension-samples repo with examples of how you can adopt this API. When testing, be sure to set chat.experimental.detectParticipant.enabled . Please note that this is a proposed API that is subject to change. Website We have fixed several links under the VS Code API page. Links to generic types and functions work again, and primitive types and values aren't formatted as links anymore! Engineering Progress on using ESM for VS Code During this milestone, we completed most of the work to adopt ESM for VS Code Core. Our goal is to use ECMAScript Modules (ESM) loading and drop AMD entirely. We will start to release ESM-enabled Insider builds in September and plan to ship ESM to Stable for our next release in October. Our plan for releasing ESM is captured in https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/226260. Notable fixes Thank you Last but certainly not least, a big Thank You to the contributors of VS Code. Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @RedCMD (RedCMD) @albertosantini (Alberto Santini) Pull requests Contributions to vscode : @akinomyoga (Koichi Murase) : Fix Bash integration clobbering $? for PROMPT_COMMAND PR #226929 @andrewbranch (Andrew Branch) : [typescript-language-features] Add autoImportSpecifierExcludeRegexes preference PR #226202 @anton-matosov (Anton Matosov) : A followup to #171066 fixing zsh and fish shells implementations PR #223421 @arvid220u (Arvid Lunnemark) : Never run cleared auxwindow timeouts PR #221296 @BABA983 (BABA) Remove duplicate code PR #224091 Respect the original terminal tab order after drag multiple tabs PR #224591 Add registerWindowTitleVariable command PR #225408 @bsShoham (Shoham Ben Shitrit) : Trigger chat variable completion on word start PR #224174 @Cecil0o0 (hj) : refactor: merge same namespace declaration PR #219638 @CGNonofr (Loïc Mangeonjean) : Properly detect node env everywhere PR #221357 @cobey (Cody Beyer) : adding ai-inference tags for python and js PR #225098 @dangerman (Anees Ahee) Fix missing "Restart TS Server" command in Command Palette PR #223433 Round off notification focus outlines PR #225824 @Flanker32 (Hanxiao Liu) : Update workspace tagging for java ai libraries PR #223677 @gabritto (Gabriela Araujo Britto) [typescript-language-features] Use commit characters from tsserver when available PR #223541 [typescript-language-features] fix diagnostics telemetry property name PR #225079 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) Show readonly filename decoration after revert that also resets mtime (fix #221014) PR #221023 Fix bad capitalization of completion item statusbar texts (#_225429) PR #225431 Improve description of workbench.editor.enablePreview setting (fix #225453) PR #225704 @hron (Aleksei Gusev) : fix: merge.toggleActiveConflict as shortcuts PR #225320 @iisaduan (Isabel Duan) : add settings for typescript's organizeImports to the settings interface PR #209293 @jeanp413 (Jean Pierre) Fix search results don't automatically update on editor changes, if I move the Search view to another location PR #215764 Change terminal rename codicon PR #225444 Fix explorer greys out any folder/item with the word "cut" PR #225455 @Jesscha (JessCha) : Fix typo in extHostExtensionService.ts PR #224111 @m-byte (Matthias B.) : Fix: only add apt sources for users that want them (#_22145) PR #221285 @mkasenberg : Fix focusResult of Search Editor PR #205914 @mogelbrod (Victor Hallberg) : Add "sort by updated at" option to comments panel PR #221665 @NriotHrreion (Norcleeh) : fix: Command palette closes when Active Terminal killed PR #225500 @r3m0t (Tomer Chachamu) : Fix "Open Workspace Settings" when User Settings is open (fixes #148709) PR #225311 @rbuckton (Ron Buckton) : Update to support strictBuiltinIteratorReturn PR #222009 @rehmsen (Ole) : Make regular text in markdown comments wrap in notebook editors. PR #224484 @RichardLuo0 (RichardLuo) : fix: remove tooltips from dialog buttons PR #225772 @stalematker (Kevin) : Fix typo in extensionEnablementService.ts PR #224145 @swordensen (Michael Sorensen) : Fixes #218626 PR #219148 @thegecko (Rob Moran) : Add viewContainer contribution point PR #212499 @tisilent (xiejialong) : Add scm.compactFolders. PR #221459 @troy351 : fix: multiDiffEditor has wrong background color name PR #224151 @walter-erquinigo (Walter Erquinigo) : Handle errors from Dynamic Debug Configuration providers PR #202622 @zkat (Kat Marchán) : stop AutoInstallerFs from thrashing forevermore and fix typings installer PR #225648 Contributions to vscode-css-languageservice : @wkillerud (William Killerud) : fix: support for conditional exports in sass's pkg PR #400 Contributions to vscode-eslint : @denis-sokolov (Denis Sokolov) : Trivial fixes in Readme PR #1903 Contributions to vscode-flake8 : @taesungh (Taesung Hwang) : Use global settings for ignorePatterns default PR #327 Contributions to vscode-generator-code : @spjpgrd (seán patrick john paul george ringo doran) : Update vsc-extension-quickstart.md PR #486 Contributions to vscode-hexeditor : @tomilho (Tomás Silva) : HexEditor diff PR #522 Contributions to vscode-isort : @iloveitaly (Michael Bianco) : fix: add tool path so isort works without bundled version PR #417 @jicruz96 (J.I. Cruz) : Do not log traceback if file has skip_file comment PR #416 Contributions to vscode-js-profile-visualizer : @jeanp413 (Jean Pierre) : Fixes microsoft/vscode#225059 PR #186 Contributions to vscode-json-languageservice : @jeremyfiel (Jeremy Fiel) : update invalid json instance in DocumentSymbols.test.ts PR #241 @remcohaszing (Remco Haszing) : Deprecate Thenable and alias to PromiseLike PR #239 @ttlopes (Tomás Lopes) : Fix microsoft/vscode#209655: fix case-sensitive JSON sorting error PR #238 Contributions to vscode-languageserver-node : @DavyLandman (Davy Landman) : Show the error message from the LSP server PR #1490 @sh-cho (Seonghyeon Cho) : Fix npm, azure pipeline links PR #1544 Contributions to vscode-loader : @SimonSiefke (Simon Siefke) : feature: set amdLoaderGlobal to globalThis in case this is not defined PR #58 Contributions to vscode-mypy : @hamirmahal (Hamir Mahal) fix: usage of deprecated version of Node.js PR #309 fix: usage of setup-node@v3 in push-check PR #318 @meghprkh (Megh Parikh) : Update mypy to 1.11.0 PR #311 Contributions to vscode-pull-request-github : @jmg-duarte (José Duarte) Use editor font for diff PR #6148 Make code blocks use the editor's font family by default PR #6149 Contributions to vscode-python-debugger : @paulacamargo25 (Paula) Fix translation error PR #411 bump release 2024.10 PR #416 bump-dev-version-2024.11 PR #417 Update debugpy version PR #432 Contributions to vscode-vsce : @BlackHole1 (Kevin Cui) : fix: probabilistic trigger v8 crash PR #1032 @mark-wiemer (Mark Wiemer) : Fix punycode deprecation warning PR #1037 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @asukaminato0721 (Asuka Minato) : add egglog PR #1989 @LPeter1997 : Added Draco.Lsp as an LSP SDK in .NET PR #2001 @marcoroth (Marco Roth) Add Tailwind Intellisense PR #1986 Add Stimulus LSP PR #1987 @techee (Jiří Techet) : Add Geany to the list of editors supporting LSP PR #2008 @XuechunHHH (Xuechun Hua) : Add PartiQL to servers.md PR #1985 Contributions to python-environment-tools : @Armd04 : Changed the order of locaters PR #136 On this page there are 24 sections On this page Accessibility Workbench Editor GitHub Copilot Languages Source Control Terminal Notebooks Tasks Debug Testing Installer Remote Development VS Code for the Web Contributions to extensions Extension authoring Debug Adapter Protocol WebAssemblies in VS Code Preview Features Proposed APIs Website Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 60-day trial + 15% permanent discount on Premium Offer validity: November 18 - December 5 Instructions: Sign up via Black Friday landing page . Alternatively: Enter the voucher code blackfriday25saas during the regular sign-up process or if you want to upgrade an existing account. Offer eligibility: The offer is eligible for new registrations and for registered users on a free plan. The user will get a 60-day free trial and a 15% discount on her monthly Premium subscription if she keeps Premium after the trial period expires. Deal support email: support@seobility.net 60-day trial + 15% permanent discount on Premium Offer validity: November 18 - December 5 Instructions: Sign up via Black Friday landing page . Alternatively: Enter the voucher code blackfriday25saas during the regular sign-up process or if you want to upgrade an existing account. Offer eligibility: The offer is eligible for new registrations and for registered users on a free plan. The user will get a 60-day free trial and a 15% discount on her monthly Premium subscription if she keeps Premium after the trial period expires. Deal support email: support@seobility.net Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now Seobility is a powerful SEO tool that was able to help us optimize the website quickly and easily. With its comprehensive website checks, page navigator and monitoring service, it allows us to ensure that the website always runs smoothly and efficiently. Samuel P. Administrator Easy to use, and the on-page recommendations are great. It's ability to track keywords and your performance against competitors for these keywords is good. If you want to perform a site audit, it's very easy to do and can be as thorough as you need it to be. Damien P. Digital Content Manager I have been using a lot of free and paid SEO tools, and even the most famous ones come with a gap; this is where Seobility comes in and fills in all the gaps perfectly. Its extensive feature set and simple interface combine to make it an all-in-one platform for monitoring, analyzing, and optimizing websites. Maham K. Content Specialist HR SOFTWARE Timebutler Time tracking tool Timebutler is an easy, browser-based tool for tracking working hours, absences and overtime. No app needed, fully GDPR-compliant and ready to use within minutes. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? Up to 25% off 6/12-month plans or 12% lifetime Offer validity: November 25 - December 21 Instructions: Create a free Timebutler account, start your trial and activate your discount via the Black Friday page before Dec 21. The coupon applies automatically. Offer eligibility: Available for users with no active paid plan or those using the deal to upgrade to a higher tier plan Deal support email: support@timebutler.de Up to 25% off 6/12-month plans or 12% lifetime Offer validity: November 25 - December 21 Instructions: Create a free Timebutler account, start your trial and activate your discount via the Black Friday page before Dec 21. The coupon applies automatically. Offer eligibility: Available for users with no active paid plan or those using the deal to upgrade to a higher tier plan Deal support email: support@timebutler.de Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now digital Display DAKboard CPU Mini Customizable Display DAKboard CPU Mini is our smallest, most budget-friendly, low-power, WiFi-only CPU. It enables plug-and-play HDMI display for basic screens: calendars, photos, weather, and more. DAKboard CPU Mini is our smallest, most budget-friendly, low-power, WiFi-only CPU. It enables plug-and-play HDMI display for basic screens: calendars, photos, weather, and more. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? Save $20USD Offer validity: November 27 - December 1 Instructions: No coupon codes necessary Offer eligibility: Available to all customers. Limit 5 per customer. Deal support: https://dakboard.freshdesk.com/support/home Save $20USD Offer validity: November 27 - December 1 Instructions: No coupon codes necessary Offer eligibility: Available to all customers. Limit 5 per customer. Deal support: https://dakboard.freshdesk.com/support/home Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now Website Tools AddSearch AI Conversations CONVERSATIONAL AI SEARCH AddSearch AI Conversations brings Conversational AI to your website. Visitors can chat naturally, ask follow-up questions, and get accurate answers from your content. It creates a seamless, chat-like search experience that helps users find what they need faster and stay engaged. AddSearch AI Conversations brings Conversational AI to your website. Visitors can chat naturally, ask follow-up questions, and get accurate answers from your content. It creates a seamless, chat-like search experience that helps users find what they need faster and stay engaged. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? Get 3 extra months free on the annual AI Conversations plan. Offer validity: November 5 - December 19 Instructions: Book a personalized demo of AI Answers to claim your offer. Offer eligibility: Available for new customers only Deal support email: support@addsearch.com Get 3 extra months free on the annual AI Conversations plan. Offer validity: November 5 - December 19 Instructions: Book a personalized demo of AI Answers to claim your offer. Offer eligibility: Available for new customers only Deal support email: support@addsearch.com Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now digital Display DAKboard CPU v4 Customizable Display DAKboard CPU v4 is our most popular and versatile CPU. Plug it into any TV/monitor via HDMI to instantly transform it into a dynamic DAKboard display: calendars, photos, weather, and more DAKboard CPU v4 is our most popular and versatile CPU. Plug it into any TV/monitor via HDMI to instantly transform it into a dynamic DAKboard display: calendars, photos, weather, and more What's the Deal? What's the Deal? Save $20USD Offer validity: November 27 - December 1 Instructions: No coupon codes necessary Offer eligibility: Available to all customers. Limit 5 per customer. Deal support: https://dakboard.freshdesk.com/support/home Save $20USD Offer validity: November 27 - December 1 Instructions: No coupon codes necessary Offer eligibility: Available to all customers. Limit 5 per customer. Deal support: https://dakboard.freshdesk.com/support/home Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now ECOMMERCE tools Cleverific order editing for Shopify Let customers fix wrong addresses, sizes, or autofill errors instantly - no support tickets needed. Save $100K+ annually on returns and reshipments while cutting support volume by 90%. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 3 months free on any plan - Exclusive for SaaS Black Friday Offer validity: November 29 - December 6 Use coupon code: 20blackfriday Instructions: Book a demo with Josh and get running within 24 hours. Offer eligibility: New Cleverific customers on Shopify. Deal support email: josh@cleverific.com 3 months free on any plan - Exclusive for SaaS Black Friday Offer validity: November 29 - December 6 Use coupon code: 20blackfriday Instructions: Book a demo with Josh and get running within 24 hours. Offer eligibility: New Cleverific customers on Shopify. Deal support email: josh@cleverific.com Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now HELP CENTER SOFTWARE HelpKit Notion to Help Center & Doc Site Turn your Notion pages into a professional knowledge base. Comes with an embeddable widget, full-text search, AI chatbot, analytics, article reactions and more! Turn your Notion pages into a professional knowledge base. Comes with an embeddable widget, full-text search, AI chatbot, analytics, article reactions and more! What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 30% OFF with BLACKFRIDAY25 Offer validity: November 24 - November 30 Instructions: Use code BLACKFRIDAY25 at checkout to receive 30% off on all subscription plans. Offer eligibility: Available to new customers. One-time use per customer. Deal support email: support@helpkit.so 30% OFF with BLACKFRIDAY25 Offer validity: November 24 - November 30 Instructions: Use code BLACKFRIDAY25 at checkout to receive 30% off on all subscription plans. Offer eligibility: Available to new customers. One-time use per customer. Deal support email: support@helpkit.so Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now marketing tools Redreach Reddit AI Lead Generation Use Redreach, the #1 Reddit Marketing tool to identify and track high-impact Reddit conversations, naturally promote your product, and increase sales via automated Reddit DMs Use Redreach, the #1 Reddit Marketing tool to identify and track high-impact Reddit conversations, naturally promote your product, and increase sales via automated Reddit DMs What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 30% OFF Offer validity: November 24 - November 30 Instructions: Use code BF25 at checkout to receive 30% off on all subscription plans Offer eligibility: Available to new customers. One-time use per customer. Deal support email: hello@redreach.ai 30% OFF Offer validity: November 24 - November 30 Instructions: Use code BF25 at checkout to receive 30% off on all subscription plans Offer eligibility: Available to new customers. One-time use per customer. Deal support email: hello@redreach.ai Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now ECOMMERCE tools SparkLayer Transform your online wholesale business SparkLayer is a B2B eCommerce platform used by 2,500+ brands. It overlays your existing site to automate wholesale workflows with pricing, payments, customer groups, and real-time ordering. SparkLayer is a B2B eCommerce platform used by 2,500+ brands. It overlays your existing site to automate wholesale workflows with pricing, payments, customer groups, and real-time ordering. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? Two-month free trial with full B2B features Offer validity: Till December 5 Instructions: Email drew@sparklayer.io to activate your 2-month trial and get access to 100+ B2B features on your existing storefront. Offer eligibility: All MindPal customers Deal support email: drew@sparklayer.io Two-month free trial with full B2B features Offer validity: Till December 5 Instructions: Email drew@sparklayer.io to activate your 2-month trial and get access to 100+ B2B features on your existing storefront. Offer eligibility: All MindPal customers Deal support email: drew@sparklayer.io Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now software comparison platform Subscribed.fyi Experiential Software Comparison Site Subscribed.fyi offers a hands-on approach to software comparison, empowering users to explore, try, and make informed choices about the best software tools for their needs. You will be listed on our search with Ads, in the category What's the Deal? What's the Deal? Starting at USD250 First Year Offer! Offer validity: 24 November - 7 December Instructions: Sign up as a new saas customer affiliated with saas.group, bootstrapper and enjoy the first year for only USD 350. Get 1 optional conversation on our podcast reaching 100k people Offer eligibility: Open exclusively to new customers from bootstrapped companies affiliated with saas.group. Deal support email: office@subscribed.fyi. Starting at USD250 First Year Offer! Offer validity: 24 November - 7 December Instructions: Sign up as a new saas customer affiliated with saas.group, bootstrapper and enjoy the first year for only USD 350. Get 1 optional conversation on our podcast reaching 100k people Offer eligibility: Open exclusively to new customers from bootstrapped companies affiliated with saas.group. Deal support email: office@subscribed.fyi. Get the Deal Now! Get the Deal Now! Get the Deal Now! AI video generator Pictory Create Videos with AI in Minutes Pictory.ai is an advanced AI video creation platform that helps businesses, marketers, and educators turn text, blogs, or scripts into engaging, high-quality videos - without any editing experience. Pictory.ai is an advanced AI video creation platform that helps businesses, marketers, and educators turn text, blogs, or scripts into engaging, high-quality videos - without any editing experience. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 50% off + 2400 AI Credits (Worth $100) Offer validity: November 17 - December 4 Instructions: use coupon code BLACKFRIDAY2025 Offer eligibility: All Annual Plans Offer eligibility: Deal support email: support@pictory.ai 50% off + 2400 AI Credits (Worth $100) Offer validity: November 17 - December 4 Instructions: use coupon code BLACKFRIDAY2025 Offer eligibility: All Annual Plans Offer eligibility: Deal support email: support@pictory.ai Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now email marketing Clearout Reduce Bounces and Deliver Emails to Real Inboxes Clearout is an AI-powered platform for email verification and finding. It helps you build clean, valid lists, reduce bounces, and reach real inboxes for better campaign performance with 99% accuracy. Clearout is an AI-powered platform for email verification and finding. It helps you build clean, valid lists, reduce bounces, and reach real inboxes for better campaign performance with 99% accuracy. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? Up to 50% OFF on Annual Subscription and PAYG plans. Offer validity: November 20 - November 30 Instructions: Sign up or log in at clearout.io , choose your preferred plan, and use the discount code to automatically apply during checkout. Offer eligibility: Available to new and existing Clearout users during the offer period. Deal support email: us@clearout.io Up to 50% OFF on Annual Subscription and PAYG plans. Offer validity: November 20 - November 30 Instructions: Sign up or log in at clearout.io , choose your preferred plan, and use the discount code to automatically apply during checkout. Offer eligibility: Available to new and existing Clearout users during the offer period. Deal support email: us@clearout.io Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now CUSTOMER SUPPORT tools Smartsupp Every chat is a chance to sell Smartsupp is Central Europe's #1 customer support platform with live chat, chatbots, and AI solutions, trusted by 100,000+ online stores and websites worldwide. Smartsupp is Central Europe's #1 customer support platform with live chat, chatbots, and AI solutions, trusted by 100,000+ online stores and websites worldwide. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 40% off annual plans, 20% off monthly plans Offer validity: November 2 - November 30 Instructions: The discount applies to Standard and Pro plans. The monthly discount is valid for up to 6 months. Available for new customers and free plan users. Offer eligibility: All trial and free Smartsupp users. Deal support email: support@smartsupp.com 40% off annual plans, 20% off monthly plans Offer validity: November 2 - November 30 Instructions: The discount applies to Standard and Pro plans. The monthly discount is valid for up to 6 months. Available for new customers and free plan users. Offer eligibility: All trial and free Smartsupp users. Deal support email: support@smartsupp.com Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now marketing tools Answer Socrates Question-based keyword research Answer Socrates finds hundreds of real questions people are asking about any topic and clusters your keywords for you - so you can create more engaging, SEO-optimized content. Answer Socrates finds hundreds of real questions people are asking about any topic and clusters your keywords for you - so you can create more engaging, SEO-optimized content. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? Up to 60% off annual plans Offer validity: November 24 - December 1 Instructions: Visit https://answersocrates.com/ between these dates to claim Offer eligibility: Seneca and Aurelius annual plans Deal support email: amanda@answersocrates.com Up to 60% off annual plans Offer validity: November 24 - December 1 Instructions: Visit https://answersocrates.com/ between these dates to claim Offer eligibility: Seneca and Aurelius annual plans Deal support email: amanda@answersocrates.com Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now CRO, UX ANALYTICS & SEO TOOL Plerdy website analysis tool for CRO & SEO Plerdy is an all-in-one website analysis tool designed for Conversion Rate Optimization (CRO) & SEO. Features include UX analytics, e-commerce insights, AI-powered reports, heatmap capabilities, and A/B Testing. Plerdy is an all-in-one website analysis tool designed for Conversion Rate Optimization (CRO) & SEO. Features include UX analytics, e-commerce insights, AI-powered reports, heatmap capabilities, and A/B Testing. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 50% OFF on annual plans. Offer validity: November 14 - December 3 Instructions: Use the promo code and start increasing your conversions. Deal Code: plerdyBF2025 Offer eligibility: All trials started between 14 Nov-3 Dec Deal support email: support@plerdy.pro 50% OFF on annual plans. Offer validity: November 14 - December 3 Instructions: Use the promo code and start increasing your conversions. Deal Code: plerdyBF2025 Offer eligibility: All trials started between 14 Nov-3 Dec Deal support email: support@plerdy.pro Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now EDtech tools Uxcel Master UX, Product, and AI skills Uxcel is the leading interactive, gamified learning platform used by 500k+ UX and Product professionals and teams like Microsoft, Deloitte, Sage, and more. Often referred as Duolingo for UX and PM. Uxcel is the leading interactive, gamified learning platform used by 500k+ UX and Product professionals and teams like Microsoft, Deloitte, Sage, and more. Often referred as Duolingo for UX and PM. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 62.5% OFF Uxcel Pro Yearly Membership Offer validity: November 24 - December 5 Instructions: Deal can be claimed via https://uxcel.com/uxcel-bfcm . People that join the waitlist will receive the deals early. Offer eligibility: Open to new and existing users that do not have active membership. Users that have active membership will receive a special plan to upgrade. Deal support email: lazar@uxcel.com 62.5% OFF Uxcel Pro Yearly Membership Offer validity: November 24 - December 5 Instructions: Deal can be claimed via https://uxcel.com/uxcel-bfcm . People that join the waitlist will receive the deals early. Offer eligibility: Open to new and existing users that do not have active membership. Users that have active membership will receive a special plan to upgrade. Deal support email: lazar@uxcel.com Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now KNOWLEDGE BASE SOFTWARE HeroThemes WordPress Knowledge Base Plugin The smart Knowledge Base plugin for your WordPress site. With instant Ajax search, analytics, user feedback, email reports, AI chatbot, and more. The smart Knowledge Base plugin for your WordPress site. With instant Ajax search, analytics, user feedback, email reports, AI chatbot, and more. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? Up to 70% off Offer validity: November 24 - December 6 Instructions: Purchase any plan during Black Friday week Offer eligibility: Deal available for all new purchases. Deal support email: shankar.c@herothemes.com Up to 70% off Offer validity: November 24 - December 6 Instructions: Purchase any plan during Black Friday week Offer eligibility: Deal available for all new purchases. Deal support email: shankar.c@herothemes.com Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now SECURITY Super Monitoring Uptime monitoring for websites and web apps Monitors uptime and proper functioning of websites and web applications. Provides email and SMS alerts, cyclic and on-demand reports, status pages, integrations (WordPress, Drupal, Joomla, Magento, PrestaShop) and API. Monitors uptime and proper functioning of websites and web applications. Provides email and SMS alerts, cyclic and on-demand reports, status pages, integrations (WordPress, Drupal, Joomla, Magento, PrestaShop) and API. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 50% OFF, one-time Offer validity: November 28 - December 5 Instructions: use the following coupon code on checkout: SUPERBLACK25 Offer eligibility: only for new customers Deal support email: https://www.supermonitoring.com/p/contact 50% OFF, one-time Offer validity: November 28 - December 5 Instructions: use the following coupon code on checkout: SUPERBLACK25 Offer eligibility: only for new customers Deal support email: https://www.supermonitoring.com/p/contact Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now AI AGENT BUILDER MindPal Turn expertise into sharable AI agents Trusted by 50k+ businesses, MindPal empowers experts, coaches, and agencies to turn their knowledge into custom AI agents and multi-agent workflows with no code. Trusted by 50k+ businesses, MindPal empowers experts, coaches, and agencies to turn their knowledge into custom AI agents and multi-agent workflows with no code. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 60% OFF first year Offer validity: available till December 8 Instructions: Use code BLACKFRIDAY25 at checkout to claim your 60% discount. Offer eligibility: This offer is available for all new and existing users who upgrade to or purchase an annual plan. Deal support email: support@mindpal.io 60% OFF first year Offer validity: available till December 8 Instructions: Use code BLACKFRIDAY25 at checkout to claim your 60% discount. Offer eligibility: This offer is available for all new and existing users who upgrade to or purchase an annual plan. Deal support email: support@mindpal.io Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now communication tools KrispCall AI-Powered Calling KrispCall is a cloud-based business phone system designed to help teams close more deals and resolve customer issues faster with AI-powered insights. It enhances collaboration through call summaries for every interaction, no matter the location. KrispCall is a cloud-based business phone system designed to help teams close more deals and resolve customer issues faster with AI-powered insights. It enhances collaboration through call summaries for every interaction, no matter the location. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 25% off monthly, 40% off yearly plans. Offer validity: November 21 - December 5 Instructions: Visit our Black Friday page, choose your preferred plan, and apply the coupon code at checkout to claim the discount. Use KRISPBFLTD40 for the annual plan or KRISPBFLTD25 for the monthly plan. Offer eligibility: Available only to new customers signing up during the promotional period. Deal support email: support@krispcall.com 25% off monthly, 40% off yearly plans. Offer validity: November 21 - December 5 Instructions: Visit our Black Friday page, choose your preferred plan, and apply the coupon code at checkout to claim the discount. Use KRISPBFLTD40 for the annual plan or KRISPBFLTD25 for the monthly plan. Offer eligibility: Available only to new customers signing up during the promotional period. Deal support email: support@krispcall.com Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now developer tools TestDino Smarter Playwright test reporting TestDino analyzes Playwright test runs, classifies failures with AI, and provides dashboards, logs, and insights for faster debugging and more reliable test suites. TestDino analyzes Playwright test runs, classifies failures with AI, and provides dashboards, logs, and insights for faster debugging and more reliable test suites. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 30% off yearly Team Plan Offer validity: November 20 - December 1 Instructions: Use coupon BFTD2025 at checkout and redeem through the support page: https://testdino.com/support/ Offer eligibility: Available to new yearly Team Plan subscribers during the promo window. Deal support email: support@testdino.com 30% off yearly Team Plan Offer validity: November 20 - December 1 Instructions: Use coupon BFTD2025 at checkout and redeem through the support page: https://testdino.com/support/ Offer eligibility: Available to new yearly Team Plan subscribers during the promo window. Deal support email: support@testdino.com Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now PROJECT MANAGEMENT tools GanttPRO Boost Teamwork. Automate Tasks. Master Planning. GanttPRO is an online project management tool with intuitive Gantt charts, real-time tracking, resource management, and collaboration for teams of any size. GanttPRO is an online project management tool with intuitive Gantt charts, real-time tracking, resource management, and collaboration for teams of any size. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? Save 30% on GanttPRO Enterprise plan Offer validity: November 24 - December 6 Instructions: Start your free trial and lock in 30% off on the annual GanttPRO plan by Dec 8. Offer eligibility: All trials started between 24 Nov - 8 Dec Deal support email: alina@ganttpro.com Save 30% on GanttPRO Enterprise plan Offer validity: November 24 - December 6 Instructions: Start your free trial and lock in 30% off on the annual GanttPRO plan by Dec 8. Offer eligibility: All trials started between 24 Nov - 8 Dec Deal support email: alina@ganttpro.com Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now communication tools Unitel Voice The business builder’s phone system Unitel Voice helps entrepreneurs and small teams sound professional and work from anywhere with call routing, auto attendants, team extensions, mobile apps, and award-winning support. Unitel Voice helps entrepreneurs and small teams sound professional and work from anywhere with call routing, auto attendants, team extensions, mobile apps, and award-winning support. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 30% off all annual plans Offer validity: November 22 - December 2 Instructions: Choose any Unitel Voice plan and select annual billing at checkout. The 30 percent discount is applied automatically when you enter your account details. Offer eligibility: Valid for new and returning customers during the Black Friday and Cyber Monday promotion period. Deal support email: Sales@unitelvoice.com 30% off all annual plans Offer validity: November 22 - December 2 Instructions: Choose any Unitel Voice plan and select annual billing at checkout. The 30 percent discount is applied automatically when you enter your account details. Offer eligibility: Valid for new and returning customers during the Black Friday and Cyber Monday promotion period. Deal support email: Sales@unitelvoice.com Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now SALES AUTOMATION SOFTWARE Snov.io Find leads. Automate outreach. Close more deals. Snov.io is an all-in-one sales engagement platform that helps you find verified leads, automate cold outreach, and track email performance to grow revenue faster. Snov.io is an all-in-one sales engagement platform that helps you find verified leads, automate cold outreach, and track email performance to grow revenue faster. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 50% off the annual plan Offer validity: November 24 - December 3 Instructions: Choose a plan, apply the code at checkout (BLACKFRIDAY, BLACKFRIDAY30, or BLACKFRIDAY10). Offer eligibility: Valid on full-price annual, 6- and 3-month plans. Excludes monthly, add-ons, tokens; not stackable. Deal support email: help@snov.io 50% off the annual plan Offer validity: November 24 - December 3 Instructions: Choose a plan, apply the code at checkout (BLACKFRIDAY, BLACKFRIDAY30, or BLACKFRIDAY10). Offer eligibility: Valid on full-price annual, 6- and 3-month plans. Excludes monthly, add-ons, tokens; not stackable. Deal support email: help@snov.io Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now CUSTOMER SUPPORT tools Consolto Customer video chat Consolto is an all-in-one customer engagement powerhouse, offering everything from AI chatbot and live chat to booking software and video meetings. It replaces four tools with one sleek platform designed to convert website visitors into real conversations and paying customers. Consolto is an all-in-one customer engagement powerhouse, offering everything from AI chatbot and live chat to booking software and video meetings. It replaces four tools with one sleek platform designed to convert website visitors into real conversations and paying customers. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 40% off for the first year Offer validity: October 25 - December 4 Instructions: 40OFFBF2025 (applied at checkout) Offer eligibility: New customers 40% off for the first year Offer validity: October 25 - December 4 Instructions: 40OFFBF2025 (applied at checkout) Offer eligibility: New customers Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now education software AIDD.io Learn AI-Driven Development AIDD is a Masterclass that teaches you how to build faster, smarter, and with more confidence using AI to operate like a team 20x your size. It focuses on workflows and is practical, adaptable, and ready to plug into any coding stack. AIDD is a Masterclass that teaches you how to build faster, smarter, and with more confidence using AI to operate like a team 20x your size. It focuses on workflows and is practical, adaptable, and ready to plug into any coding stack. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 40% Off on all plans Offer validity: November 18 - December 5 Instructions: Discount applies automatically. Offer eligibility: Valid for all plans with new purchases. Deal support email: team@aidd.io 40% Off on all plans Offer validity: November 18 - December 5 Instructions: Discount applies automatically. Offer eligibility: Valid for all plans with new purchases. Deal support email: team@aidd.io Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now marketing tools Mailmodo Email Automation Simplified with AI Agents Mailmodo is a tool that helps businesses create, automate, and optimize campaigns effortlessly. From strategy planning to writing copy and building journeys, Mailmodo’s AI Agents handle it all — no technical expertise required. It’s ideal for both beginners and advanced marketers who want interactive, high-performing emails without any coding. Mailmodo is a tool that helps businesses create, automate, and optimize campaigns effortlessly. From strategy planning to writing copy and building journeys, Mailmodo’s AI Agents handle it all — no technical expertise required. It’s ideal for both beginners and advanced marketers who want interactive, high-performing emails without any coding. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 30% off on annual subscription plans Offer validity: Until November 30 Instructions: Application only on annual payments, not monthly. Offer eligibility: New customers Deal support email: enquiries@mailmodo.com 30% off on annual subscription plans Offer validity: Until November 30 Instructions: Application only on annual payments, not monthly. Offer eligibility: New customers Deal support email: enquiries@mailmodo.com Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now customer experience tools SurveySparrow Turn customer voice into business growth. SurveySparrow is an experience management platform to create engaging surveys, collect real-time customer & employee insights, analyze trends, and turn feedback into actions that boost experience & loyalty. SurveySparrow is an experience management platform to create engaging surveys, collect real-time customer & employee insights, analyze trends, and turn feedback into actions that boost experience & loyalty. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? Flat 35% Off on Annual Plans of Surveys Offer validity: November 22 - December 8 Instructions: Sign up for a free trial and upgrade to an annual plan from within the product. Discount auto-applies at checkout. Offer eligibility: Valid for new, free, and trial accounts. Deal support email: support@surveysparrow.com Flat 35% Off on Annual Plans of Surveys Offer validity: November 22 - December 8 Instructions: Sign up for a free trial and upgrade to an annual plan from within the product. Discount auto-applies at checkout. Offer eligibility: Valid for new, free, and trial accounts. Deal support email: support@surveysparrow.com Get the Deal Now Get the Deal Now productivity tools Hubstaff Time tracking tool for global teams Hubstaff is a time tracking platform built for global teams. Track time, automate payments, monitor productivity, and get actionable productivity insights - all in one tool. Hubstaff is a time tracking platform built for global teams. Track time, automate payments, monitor productivity, and get actionable productivity insights - all in one tool. What's the Deal? What's the Deal? 30% off new annual plans Offer validity: November 24 - December 2 Instructions: Visit Hubstaff.com/pricing to claim - discount applied at checkout. Offer eligibility: 30% off valid on new annual plans only. Deal support email: carey.morgan@hubstaff.com 30% off new annual plans Offer validity: November 24 - December 2 Instructions: Visit Hubstaff.com/pricing to claim - discount applied at checkout. 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https://defectivebydesign.org/ | We oppose DRM. | Defective by Design Skip to main content --> ​ Push freedom ahead! The free software community has always thwarted the toughest challenges facing freedom in technology. This winter season, we want to thank the many individuals and projects that have helped us get where we are today: a world where a growing number of users are able to do their computing in full freedom. Our work isn't over. We have so much more to do. Help us reach our stretch New Year's membership goal of 100 new associate members by January 16, 2026, and keep the FSF strong and independent. Join | Read more Join Renew Donate Defective by Design Home What is DRM? Take Action DRM-free Guide Blog Contact Donate Give the gift of freedom! The Ethical Tech Giving Guide replaces DRM-laden software and devices that trample user freedom and privacy with products and programs that you can trust. Read more Get the t-shirt! Look sharp while you fight for digital freedoms with our "DRM - no one admitted" t-shirt Show your support Eliminate DRM If we want to avoid a future in which our devices serve as an apparatus to monitor and control our interaction with digital media, we must fight to retain control of our media and software. Take action We oppose DRM. We are a participatory and grassroots campaign exposing DRM-encumbered devices and media for what they really are: Defective by Design. We are working together to eliminate DRM as a threat to innovation in media, the privacy of readers, and freedom for computer users. Learn more » Repeat offenders These companies don't want a free web. They think they make money by limiting your freedom. More » The dirty truth about DRM. "If consumers even know there's a DRM, what it is, and how it works, we've already failed." —Peter Lee, Disney Executive in an interview with The Economist in 2005. Get action alerts Email * We won't share your information. Blog Amazon tightens the digital handcuffs Mar 5 Keep putting pressure on Microsoft Dec 27 IDAD 2024 - Dec. 20: For freedom, against restriction Dec 16 Our work isn't over: Keep fighting for the freedom to learn Dec 19 Worldwide community of activists protest OverDrive and others forcing DRM upon libraries Nov 28 Go to blog » Check out other Free Software Foundation campaigns GNU , a free Unix-like operating system Upgrade from Windows , pledge to free your computer today! Defective by Design is a campaign of the Follow us on Mastodon and Twitter . Copyright © 2006—2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 4.0 license (or later version) — Why this license? Copyright Infringement Notification JavaScript License Information | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_107 | November 2025 (version 1.107) Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 Updates Insiders December 2025 November 2025 October 2025 September 2025 August 2025 July 2025 June 2025 May 2025 April 2025 March 2025 February 2025 January 2025 November 2024 October 2024 September 2024 August 2024 July 2024 June 2024 May 2024 April 2024 March 2024 February 2024 January 2024 November 2023 October 2023 September 2023 August 2023 July 2023 June 2023 May 2023 April 2023 November 2025 (version 1.107) Release date: December 10, 2025 Update 1.107.1 : The update improves the agent sessions experience , adds an agent workflow tutorial , and addresses these issues . The key highlights include: Agent sessions view defaults to side-by-side and remembers your toggle state. Agent sessions that require your input are now clearly marked. Support for copying workspace changes when creating a background session. Chat prompt is not cleared when creating a new session. Tool calls in cloud sessions are now collapsed by default. Downloads: Windows: x64 Arm64 | Mac: Universal Intel silicon | Linux: deb rpm tarball Arm snap VS Code 1.107 introduces multi-agent orchestration - use GitHub Copilot and custom agents together to accelerate and parallelize development. Agent HQ gives you one place to manage all your agents, letting Copilot and custom agents collaborate across tasks. Background agents run in isolated workspaces to not interfere with your active work, and enabling multiple background tasks at once. Delegate work across local, background, or cloud agents to keep your workflow moving without interruptions. Watch our VS Code 1.107 release highlights video to hear about these features from our engineers! Happy Coding! Read these release notes online at Updates on code.visualstudio.com . Insiders: Download the nightly Insiders build to try the latest updates as soon as they're available. In this update Agents Chat MCP Accessibility Editor Experience Code Editing Source Control Debugging Terminal Authentication Languages Remote Development Enterprise Contributions to extensions Proposed APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Navigation End --> Agents Manage your agents from chat ( Show more ). Share agents across your organization ( Show more ). Keep agents active while chat is closed ( Show more ). Move agent sessions from local to cloud ( Show more ). Run agents in dedicated Git worktrees ( Show more ). Attach context to background agents ( Show more ). Customize background agents ( Show more ). Reuse custom agents across environments ( Show more ). Run custom subagents ( Show more ). Reuse Claude skills ( Show more ). Integrating agent sessions and chat Setting : chat.viewSessions.enabled Update 1.107.1 : This update significantly improves the side-by-side sessions experience. Hiding the sessions with the toggle now remembers your choice, allowing you to resize the Chat view at will. Get started with the agent workflow tutorial . Agents are key to autonomously performing coding tasks on your behalf. The chat interface is the main way to interact with agents, regardless of where they are running: locally in VS Code, in the background using a CLI, in the cloud, or from 3rd party extensions. Learn more about using agents in VS Code in our documentation. This iteration, we integrated the agent sessions into the Chat view to give you a unified experience when working with agents. At a glance, you can see the session's status, progress, and file change statistics. You can archive or unarchive sessions to keep the sessions list manageable. If you are working in a workspace, the session list only shows sessions related to the current workspace. If you are in an empty window, all sessions across workspaces are shown. When you select a session from the list, it opens the session in the Chat view in the Side Bar, allowing you to see the full conversation history. If you prefer, you can also open a session as an editor tab or in a new window. Right-click a session to see the context menu with these options. You can disable the sessions list in the Chat view by configuring chat.viewSessions.enabled . As a consequence of this change, we're disabling the standalone Agent Sessions view by default. If you prefer to keep using the standalone view, you can re-enable it via chat.agentSessionsViewLocation . In a future release, we plan to remove the standalone view entirely. Compact view When the Chat view is narrow, the list of sessions is shown inside the Chat view when you start a new chat session. By default, the list shows the three most recent sessions that are not archived. Select Show All Sessions to view the full list of sessions with options to search and filter. You can use the action to toggle the agent sessions sidebar for a wider experience of all sessions. Side-by-side view Once the Chat view is wide enough (for example, when you maximize it), the list of agent sessions is automatically shown side-by-side with the Chat view. This view lets you quickly navigate between sessions without losing context. You can also manually toggle this side-by-side view using the corresponding control. To limit the sessions list, you can filter sessions by provider or state. VS Code persists this filter. Orientation setting Setting : chat.viewSessions.orientation By default, the sessions list appears side-by-side with the Chat view when it's wide enough or if you manually toggle the sessions list. You can change this behavior with the chat.viewSessions.orientation setting. auto (default): show the sessions side-by-side if the width allows it, otherwise show them above empty chats stacked : always show the sessions above empty chats sideBySide : show the session list side-by-side if the width allows it, otherwise hide the sessions list Local agent sessions remain active when closed Previously, when you closed a local chat session, a running agent request was cancelled. This limited the usefulness of local agents for long-running tasks or for running multiple tasks simultaneously. Now, the local agent continues running in the background, even when not open in a chat editor or the Chat view. You are able to see the status of the running agent in the sessions list and can switch back to the session at any time to see the detailed progress. Learn more about using local agent in chat . Continue tasks in background or cloud agents Local agents are great for interactive sessions inside VS Code where you can go back and forth with the agent. This can be useful for brainstorming, performing exploratory tasks, or to work out an implementation plan. Once you have a clear plan, you can then hand the task off to a background or cloud agent to execute it autonomously. This iteration, we have improved the experience to continue a local chat with a background or cloud agent. Across the UI, you can now continue a task seamlessly using the new Continue in option. When you continue a local chat to background or cloud agent, the current chat context is passed along and the original session is archived after handoff. Chat view: Plan agent: Untitled prompt file: Isolate background agents with Git worktrees Background agents (previously called CLI agents) are designed to run autonomously in the background, allowing you to offload tasks while you focus on other work. Running multiple background agents simultaneously can lead to conflicts if they modify the same files in your workspace. This iteration, we enhanced the isolation of background agents by introducing support for Git worktrees . When you create a new background agent, you can choose to either run it on the current workspace or to run it in a dedicated Git worktree. When you run a background agent in a worktree, the agent automatically creates a new Git worktree for the session, isolating its changes in a separate folder. This lets you run multiple background agents simultaneously without conflicts. You can easily review and merge the changes made by the background agent in the worktree back into your main workspace when the agent completes its task. We've also added a new action to directly apply the changes from a worktree directly into your workspace. Learn more about using background agents in VS Code . Adding context to background agents Background agents now support multiple context attachment types. You can attach selections, problems, symbols, search results, git commits, and more to any prompt. This makes it possible to build richer, more precise prompts, unlocking more complex and flexible workflows. For example, attach a reported problem and ask the agent to fix it without manually specifying file paths and line numbers. Share custom agents across your GitHub organization (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.customAgents.showOrganizationAndEnterpriseAgents Previously, you could only define custom agents at a workspace or user level. If you wanted to share custom agents across your organization, you had to manually distribute the agent files to each user. In this release, you can now define custom agents at the organization level for your GitHub account. This experimental feature enables you to use organization-specific agents alongside your personal agents in chat. To enable this feature, set github.copilot.chat.customAgents.showOrganizationAndEnterpriseAgents to true . Once enabled, custom agents created by your organization appear in the Agents dropdown in VS Code. To learn more about creating custom agents for your organization, see Create custom agents in the GitHub documentation. Use custom agents with background agents (Experimental) Setting : github.copilot.chat.cli.customAgents.enabled You can now bring your own custom agents into Background Agents. Once enabled, custom agents defined in your .github/agents folder will appear in your agent list, allowing you to leverage agents tailored to your workflows and requirements. This experimental functionality can be enabled with the github.copilot.chat.cli.customAgents.enabled setting. Learn more about defining custom agents in our documentation. Agent tooling reorganization We've reorganized the agent tooling structure to enable better compatibility with GitHub custom agents. This lets you more easily reuse custom agents across VS Code and GitHub environments without requiring separate configurations. As part of this change, we've renamed certain existing tool references and the toolsets they belong to. Existing tool references in your agent files will continue to work, but you'll see a Code Action for renaming them to the latest recommended format. This ensures that your agent configurations follow the current best practices and maintain compatibility across platforms. Run agents as subagents (Experimental) Setting : chat.customAgentInSubagent.enabled When an agent needs to solve a complex issue, it can delegate tasks to subagents . Subagents work independently from the main chat session and have their own context window. This helps the main conversation to stay focused on the high-level objective and helps to manage context window limitations. With this release, you can customize subagents via custom agents . Custom agents let you define specialized personas for the AI, tailoring their behavior to specific tasks or domains. For example, a code reviewer agent focuses on reviewing code rather than make code changes. To use custom agents as subagents, follow these steps: Enable chat.customAgentInSubagent.enabled Create a custom agent with the Chat: New Custom Agent command, if you don't have one yet. In chat, ask the model "what subagents can you use?" to see the list of available subagents. Your custom agent should appear in the list. Enter a prompt that meets the requirements for your custom agent. The language model uses the custom agent description and arguments to determine if it should be used for your request. To prevent a custom agent from being used as a subagent, set the metadata property infer to false in the *.agent.md file. Learn more about using subagents in chat . Reuse your Claude skills (Experimental) Setting : chat.useClaudeSkills Skills were introduced by Claude Code and are capabilities that an agent can load on-demand. Each skill comes with a short description that advertizes the skill. If useful, the agent can decide to read the full skill instructions. Skill instructions can come with supporting files like scripts and templates. Once loaded, skills instructions and supporting files are part of the context of the main conversation. VS Code can now reuse your existing skills. Enable the chat.useClaudeSkills setting to allow agents to discover and use your skills. VS Code supports personal skills found at ~/.claude/skills/skill-name/SKILL.md and project skills found in workspace folders at ${workspaceFolder}.claude/skills/skill-name/SKILL.md . Check that the SKILL.md file has a description attribute in the header that advertizes the skill. Note that the allowed-tools attribute is not supported in VS Code. In agent mode, make sure you have the read-file tool enabled and ask "What skills do you have" to find out if skills are found. Next, make a request that can be answered with a skill. If the agent doesn't use the skill, improve the skill description or nudge the model to use skills. Chat Inline chat is optimized for code edits ( Show more ). Manage your chat models ( Show more ). Review external web content ( Show more ). Fetch dynamic web content ( Show more ). Search ignored files ( Show more ). Access terminal output in chat ( Show more ). Automatically approve terminal commands for your session ( Show more ). More keyboard shortcuts are available ( Show more ). Use Entra ID for Azure-hosted models ( Show more ). Configure extended thinking budget for Anthropic models ( Show more ). Use chat more efficiently ( Show more ). View diffs for edits to sensitive files ( Show more ). Hide chat tool calls for reasoning models ( Show more ). Inline chat UX Setting : inlineChat.enableV2 We continue to improve the inline chat experience to align it with the other chat experiences in VS Code and to optimize it for quick, single-file code changes. Previously, you could also use inline chat for general questions and discussions. Now, inline chat is optimized for code changes within the current file. For tasks that inline chat cannot handle, you are automatically upgraded to the Chat view where your prompt is being replayed, using the same model and the same context The inlineChat.enableV2 setting (preview) now only controls how the extension handles your prompt. This is still under development but can be tried with confidence. Language Models editor Chat in VS Code supports multiple language models, either provided by GitHub Copilot, third-party extensions, or via bring your own key (BYOK) providers. Managing all these models can be challenging, especially when you have access to many models across different providers. Learn more about using language models in VS Code . The Language Models editor provides a centralized place to view and manage all available language models for chat in VS Code. You can open it from the model picker in chat or via the Command Palette with Chat: Manage Language Models . The editor lists all models available to you, showing key information such as the model capabilities, context size, billing details, and visibility status. By default, models are grouped by provider, but you can also group them by visibility. Hover over model names or context sizes to see detailed information including model ID, version, status, and token breakdown. You can search and filter models using: Text search with highlighting Provider filter: @provider:"OpenAI" Capability filters: @capability:tools , @capability:vision , @capability:agent Visibility filter: @visible:true/false Manage model visibility As more models are available to you, the model picker can become overwhelming and difficult to navigate. In the Language Models editor, you can toggle the visibility of each model to control which models appear in the model picker. Hover over a model and select the eye icon to toggle its visibility. Add models from installed providers From the Language Models editor, you can add more models with Add Models... . This shows a dropdown list of all installed model providers. Select a provider to configure it and add its models to chat in VS Code. This makes it easy to activate additional model providers you've installed without needing to navigate away from the Language Models editor. Access provider management by selecting the gear icon on provider rows. URL and domain auto approval This iteration, we enhanced the security and user experience of auto-approving URLs for the fetch tool. When the model decides to fetch content from a URL that you did not explicitly ask for, you'll see the new two-step approval experience: Approve the initial request to fetch the URL This step ensures that you trust the domain being contacted and can prevent sensitive data to be sent to untrusted sites. You have options for one-time approval or automatically approving future requests to the specific URL or domain. The pre-approval respects the "Trusted Domains" feature . If a domain is listed there, you are automatically approved to make requests to that domain and are deferred to the response reviewing step. Approve to use the fetched content in chat and follow-up tool calls This step ensures that you review the fetched content before it is added to the chat or passed to other tools, preventing potential prompt injection attacks. For example, you might approve a request to fetch content from a well-known site, like GitHub.com. But because the content, such as issue description or comments, is user-generated, it could contain harmful content that might manipulate the model's behavior. Learn more about URL and domain approval in VS Code chat. More robust fetch tool The #fetch agent tool now handles dynamic web content more effectively. It can retrieve dynamic content, in addition to static HTML. Websites that rely on JavaScript to load their content, such as Single-Page Applications (SPAs), modern documentation sites, or issue tracking systems like Jira, no longer return incomplete or empty results. The fetch tool waits for JavaScript to execute and content to load before retrieving the page, ensuring that dynamically-rendered content is captured. This improvement makes the tool significantly more useful in real-life scenarios. When you use #fetch followed by a URL, the model accesses the actual content you'd see in the browser, not just the initial HTML skeleton. This means more accurate and complete information when asking questions about web pages or requesting the model to analyze online content. Text Search tool can search ignored files The #textSearch tool now supports searching in ignored files/folders specified by files.exclude or search.exclude settings or .gitignore files, such as the node_modules folder. It also returns hints to the agent about the ignored files/folders when there are no results, allowing agents to turn around and enable searching in those ignored files/folders. Rich terminal output in chat Using Toggle Output on a Run in Terminal response now renders output in a full, read-only xterm.js terminal inside chat. A nice benefit of this approach is that VS Code preserves captured output even after the backing terminal has exited, so you can reopen previous runs at any time and see the terminal output as it was when the command ran. The chat terminal now adopts the integrated terminal's color theme for improved ANSI color contrast. Screen reader users can open the accessible view ⌥F2 (Windows Alt+F2 , Linux Shift+Alt+F2 ) when the output has focus, enabling easy review and navigation. Learn more about using terminal commands in chat . Command status details in chat terminals Chat terminal messages now display command start time, duration, and exit code on hover of the command decoration. Allow all terminal commands in this session To optimize your chat experience, while maintaining security and control, the terminal tool has a new auto approve option to allow all future commands for the session. When you start a new session, terminal commands will follow the existing approval configuration. Keyboard shortcuts for chat terminal actions You can now focus the most recent chat terminal ⇧⌥⌘T (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+Alt+T ) or toggle its expansion state ⇧⌥⌘O (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+Alt+O ) via dedicated keyboard shortcuts. Keyboard shortcuts for custom agents Each custom agent now has a separate action in the command list for them and you can bind keyboard shortcuts to them individually. For example, if you define a "Code Reviewer" custom agent, there will be a Chat: Open Chat (Code Reviewer Agent) command in the Command Palette to bind a keyboard shortcut to. Azure model provider: Entra ID as the default authentication Setting : github.copilot.chat.azureAuthType By default, the Azure model provider now uses Entra ID authentication when connecting to Bring-Your-Own-Key (BYOK) models, providing improved security and a more streamlined sign-in experience. If you prefer to authenticate using an API key, set github.copilot.chat.azureAuthType to apiKey instead of entraId (default). Anthropic models: Extended thinking support Setting : github.copilot.chat.anthropic.thinking.budgetTokens Anthropic models now support extended thinking, which is enabled by default for all Anthropic extended thinking models. Extended thinking gives Claude enhanced reasoning capabilities for complex tasks by allowing it to spend additional tokens on its step-by-step thought process before generating a response, leading to more thoughtful and accurate outputs. The default thinking budget is set to 4,000 tokens. You can customize this budget by modifying the github.copilot.chat.anthropic.thinking.budgetTokens setting to adjust how many tokens the model can use for extended thinking. To turn off extended thinking entirely, set the budget to 0 . Note : Interleaved thinking, which enables Claude to reason between tool calls, is only available when using Anthropic models via Bring-Your-Own-Key (BYOK). It uses the same thinking budget setting configured above. Chat view appearance improvements We've made several improvements to the Chat view's appearance to enhance readability and usability: Chat title : When you open a chat, a new title control appears to the top showing you the title of the chat as well as giving you a quick way to get back to an empty chat. Configure this behavior via the chat.viewTitle.enabled setting. Welcome banner : If you prefer a more minimal experience when opening a new chat, the new setting chat.viewWelcome.enabled lets you hide the icon and welcome text. Restore previous chat session : When you open chat after restarting or opening a different workspace, the previous session is now restored by default. You can change this behavior via the chat.viewRestorePreviousSession setting and choose to always start with an empty chat. Diffs for edits to sensitive files When chat attempts to edit sensitive files, such as the settings.json or package.json , you get a notification and are asked to approve the changes before they are applied. You can configure which files are considered sensitive via the chat.tools.edits.autoApprove setting. Previously, you would see the raw edit that the model proposed, which could be difficult to understand. Now, we show you a diff of the proposed changes, making it easier to review and approve the edits. Learn more about editing sensitive files in chat . Collapsible reasoning and tools output (Experimental) Setting : chat.agent.thinkingStyle , chat.agent.thinking.collapsedTools With language model reasoning and agent tools output, a chat conversation can quickly become long and difficult to follow. Last iteration, we already worked on improving how we display thinking tokens in chat with the chat.agent.thinkingStyle setting. This iteration, we're further optimizing the chat experience by introducing collapsible chat sections for non-reasoning chat output, such as tool calls. By default, successive tool calls are now collapsed to reduce visual noise. Collapsible items (most tools and reasoning text) will be summarized and an AI-generated title will be given to each collapsible section. MCP We added support for the latest MCP specification ( Show more ). Use the GitHub remote MCP server without extra setup ( Show more ). Support for the latest MCP specification VS Code supports the latest revision of the MCP specification, 2025-11-25 . This includes, among other things: URL mode elicitation Tasks for long-running, resilient tool calls and client work. Enhancements to enum choices in elicitation These improvements come in addition to the 2025-11-25 draft features VS Code already supported, such as WWW-Authenticate scope consent, the Client ID Metadata Document authentication flow, and icons for tools, resources, and servers. You can view the changelog for the 2025-11-25 draft on the MCP website . Learn more about using MCP servers in VS Code . GitHub MCP Server provided by GitHub Copilot Chat (Preview) Setting : github.copilot.chat.githubMcpServer.enabled The GitHub remote MCP Server is now provided as a built-in MCP server in the GitHub Copilot Chat extension, providing seamless integration with GitHub repositories and services. This integration offers several benefits: Alignment with other Copilot agent harnesses like Copilot CLI and Copilot Cloud Agent that already use the GitHub MCP Server Reuse of existing GitHub authentication state, eliminating additional authentication prompts Transparent support for different GitHub MCP endpoints including GHE.com To enable the GitHub MCP Server, set the github.copilot.chat.githubMcpServer.enabled setting to true . Once enabled, the server automatically appears in the tool picker when using agents. This enables you to ask questions about GitHub issues, pull requests, and other repository information without additional configuration and setup. The GitHub MCP Server supports customization through several settings: github.copilot.chat.githubMcpServer.toolsets : Configure which tools are available. By default, the default toolset is used, but you can extend it by adding workflows or other toolsets as documented in the GitHub MCP Server documentation . Note: Adding certain toolsets may require additional permissions and re-authentication is not yet supported. Please see this GitHub issue to track progress. github.copilot.chat.githubMcpServer.readonly : Force the server to return only read-only tools, preventing any write operations. github.copilot.chat.githubMcpServer.lockdown : Additional security control for tool behavior. Note : This feature is currently in Preview and requires explicit opt-in through the setting mentioned above. We are planning to enable it by default in a future release in a way that makes it available when wanted, but not intrusive when not needed. Accessibility Keyboard approval for chat confirmations When an agent prompts for confirmation, you can now approve via keyboard using ⌘Enter (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Enter ) . Editor Experience More easily identify open projects ( Show more ). Swipe to navigate on macOS ( Show more ). Choose when to view hover popups ( Show more ). More support to indicate opened windows in pickers We added an indicator to the Open Recent picker for when a workspace is already open in a VS Code window. The currently active window is indicated slightly differently from other opened windows to make that distinction clearer. Entries that are not opened in any window have no icon. The indicator of which window is active has also been applied to the window picker. macOS: Mouse swipe to navigate Setting : workbench.editor.swipeToNavigate On macOS you can now navigate between editors using 3-finger swipe gesture with the trackpad. Swiping left or right navigates across recently used editors in any editor group. Enable this with the workbench.editor.swipeToNavigate setting. Note : We currently only support 3-finger swipe gesture. Make sure that your trackpad settings for swiping are configured like the following to make this work: Swipe between pages: Scroll left or right with three fingers. Swipe between full-screen apps: Swipe left or right with four fingers. On demand editor hover popups Setting : editor.hover.enabled You can now disable automatic hover popups in the editor, while retaining the ability to trigger hover information on-demand using a keyboard modifier. The editor.hover.enabled setting now supports three values: on , off , and onKeyboardModifier . When set to onKeyboardModifier , hover information only appears when you hold the opposite modifier key from your editor.multiCursorModifier setting while hovering over code. This reduces visual distractions during text selection while preserving quick access to contextual information when needed. For example, if your editor.multiCursorModifier is set to ctrlCmd , hover appears when you hold Alt while hovering. If set to alt , hover appears when you hold Ctrl (or Cmd on macOS). Code Editing TypeScript offers rename suggestions ( Show more ). Use a new model for next edit suggestions ( Show more ). Preview next edit suggestions outside your viewport ( Show more ). Rename suggestions for TypeScript Rename suggestions predict when a symbol rename should happen instead of a regular text suggestion. When predicted, an additional indicator is shown together with the normal textual edit. You can then apply the symbol rename by using Shift+Tab . In the following video, property a is renamed to width . The rename suggestion then suggests to rename b to height , as well as renaming the two parameters a and b accordingly. Next rename suggestion works best when it predicts related renames to other symbols. Note : this feature is currently rolled out to our user base using an experiment and is only available for TypeScript for now. Support for other programming languages is planned. New model for next edit suggestions We have released a new model for next edit suggestions that is smarter and more in-tune with your latest edits. It delivers significantly better acceptance and dismissal performance. Learn more about the model and its development in our GitHub blog post. Preview next edit suggestions outside the viewport When you receive a next edit suggestion that is outside the current viewport, it can be difficult to know what the suggestion is without scrolling away from your current position. We improved this experience by rendering a preview of the next edit suggestion where your cursor is currently located. This helps reduce the impact on your flow when reviewing suggestions. Note : Our current language model focuses on next edit suggestions close to the cursor, so you might not often see suggestions outside the viewport. However, we are actively working on models which can give you suggestions much further away! Learn more about inline suggestions in VS Code . Source Control Stashes in the Source Control Repositories view (Experimental) Settings : scm.repositories.explorer , scm.repositories.selectionMode This milestone, we continued to expand the list of repository artifacts shown in the Source Control Repositories view by adding a Stashes node. Under this node, you can see the complete list of stashes, view, apply, and pop each stash. The context menu also contains an action to drop each stash. You can enable the experimental repository explorer by setting the scm.repositories.selectionMode and scm.repositories.explorer settings. Please give it a try and let us know what other repository artifacts you would like to see in the repositories explorer. Learn more about using source control in VS Code . Debugging Attach variables to chat You can now attach variables, scopes, and expressions to your chat context in VS Code. You can do this by right clicking on data in the Variables and Watch views, or by using the Add Context button in chat. Terminal Terminal suggest rolled out to stable Terminal Suggest is now enabled for stable users, offering inline completions and contextual hints while you type shell commands. Suggestions now group related argument values together, so option flags and their parameters stay organized in the list. Authentication Cross-platform native broker support for Microsoft Authentication Setting : microsoft-authentication.implementation This milestone, we adopted the latest MSAL libraries, enabling you to sign in through a native experience on: Intel Macs Linux x64 (just certain distros that are Debian-based) This is in addition to the existing support for: Windows x64 macOS M-series (ARM) macOS and Linux support requires your machine to be Intune enrolled and be opted in to using the native broker. This enables nice single sign-on flows and is the recommended way of acquiring a Microsoft authentication session. The MSAL team will enable this up for the remaining platforms (Windows ARM, Linux ARM and additional distros) over time, so stay tuned! NOTE: If you have trouble authenticating via the broker, you can change the microsoft-authentication.implementation to msal-no-broker , which will use your browser to authenticate instead. classic Microsoft authentication no longer available As mentioned last month, we have removed the classic option for microsoft-authentication.implementation due to low usage and it not being recommended by the Entra ID team. Reminder: The microsoft-authentication.implementation setting has been around to let users opt-out of native brokered authentication for Microsoft accounts if they experienced issues. The values for this setting are: msal - Use MSAL with brokered authentication when available (default) msal-no-broker - Use MSAL without brokered authentication Languages TypeScript 7.0 preview We continued to work with the TypeScript team to improve VS Code's support for the upcoming TypeScript 7 release . TypeScript 7 is a complete rewrite in native code and offers dramatically better performance. The TypeScript 7 preview has almost complete type checking support, and the TypeScript team has been busy adding editor features too. Recent highlights include auto import completions, rename support, and references code lenses. You can try out TypeScript 7.0 today by installing the TypeScript (Native Preview) extension . Then run the TypeScript (Native Preview): Enable (Experimental) command in a JavaScript or TypeScript file to switch all IntelliSense to use the native preview. Checkout the most recent TypeScript 7 blog post for a full update on TypeScript 7 and the general direction of the TypeScript project. We plan to continue working closely with the TypeScript team to improve TypeScript 7's VS Code support. Once TypeScript 7 is ready, our longer term plan is to switch to it as the default experience powering VS Code's JavaScript and TypeScript IntelliSense. If you need to use an older TS version or need editor features like TypeScript service plugins that can't be easily ported to TypeScript 7, we're planning to continue supporting existing TypeScript versions for the foreseeable future alongside TypeScript 7.0+. Remote Development The Remote Development extensions , allow you to use a Dev Container , remote machine via SSH or Remote Tunnels , or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) as a full-featured development environment. Highlights include: SSH reconnection grace time control You can learn more about these features in the Remote Development release notes . Enterprise Learn more about the enterprise capabilities of VS Code in our documentation. Control auto approval for agent tools Setting : chat.tools.eligibleForAutoApproval Specific agent tools can be risky to use without explicit user approval, especially those that can perform destructive actions, access sensitive data, or run arbitrary code in the background (for example, runTask ). You can now define which tools are eligible for auto-approval with the new chat.tools.eligibleForAutoApproval setting. When a tool is denied from auto-approval, users won't have the option to always approve this tool in chat and must explicitly approve each use. Organizations can enforce this behavior via an enterprise policy across their users to enhance security when using agents. Disable the use of agents by policy When an enterprise policy disables the use of agents in chat, the Agents picker now better communicates why they're not available. Support GitHub Enterprise policies in Codespaces You can specify policies for your enterprise or organization in GitHub that are applied in VS Code. For example, you can configure the MCP registry URL to be used by developers in your organization. In this release, we added support for these policies when using VS Code with GitHub Codespaces. When a developer opens a Codespace, the same policies are applied automatically, as they already are when using VS Code locally. Contributions to extensions GitHub Pull Requests There has been more progress on the GitHub Pull Requests extension, which enables you to work on, create, and manage pull requests and issues. New features include: Pull request and issue implicit context when a pull request or issue webview is active. Pull requests and issues can be added explicitly as context to chat sessions through "Add Context". Copilot pull requests can be marked ready for review, approved, and auto-merge set with a single button. Review the changelog for the 0.124.0 release of the extension to learn about everything in the release. Proposed APIs Contributed Chat Context We have a new API proposal to let extensions contribute context providers for chat. This enables extensions to provide rich context from their own domain to be used in chat sessions. For example, the GitHub Pull Request extension provides the following context: Workspace context, with information about the current repository, branch, and pull request. Implicit pull request and issue context when a pull request or issue webview is active. Explicit pull request and issue context when the user adds them via "Add Context". The API is still in the early stages, so expect changes to come. We'd love to get feedback on what parts of the proposal will solve extension authors' needs. You can find the proposal here: vscode.proposed.chatContextProvider.d.ts . Engineering Builds rollout We've started progressively rolling out Insiders build releases over a 4-hour time window. This means that, as an Insiders user, you might receive the update notification a bit later than usual. If you're in a hurry, you can always run Check for Updates to force the update to be applied immediately. We'll roll out the November 2025 (1.107) release to Stable users over a 24-hour time window. Just like Insiders, you can always run Check for Updates to force the update to be applied immediately. Improved website search functionality We've improved our website with fast, client-side search that allows you to easily and quickly navigate across our documentation. We've open-sourced the library behind this functionality: you can download docfind and use it for your projects today! We'll follow up with a blog post on the innovations behind this tech. Updated build scripts run directly as TypeScript This iteration, we cleaned up our build scripts to make them easier to work with and maintain. These build scripts were a mix of compiled TypeScript, TypeScript files run using ts-node , and JavaScript. Many of these scripts were not type checked and were using commonjs ( require ) instead of modern modules with import and export . Even worse, many of the TypeScript build scripts required checking in the compiled JS output to our source control. What a mess! Thankfully Node 22.18+ now allows running scripts directly as TypeScript . This lets us incrementally convert our build scripts to modern TypeScript. We used the follow tsconfig options to make sure our new TypeScript code could be run directly by Node: { "compilerOptions" : { "target" : "esnext" , "module" : "nodenext" , "noEmit" : true , // Don't generate .js files "erasableSyntaxOnly" : true , // Only allow TypeScript syntax that node can strip out. Enums and namespaces for example are not allowed "allowImportingTsExtensions" : true , // Allow importing of .ts files "verbatimModuleSyntax" : true // Make sure imports will be valid when the script is run by node directly } } GitHub Copilot helped automate many of the required changes, such as converting old commonjs files to modules and adding type annotations. One thing to keep in mind is that while Node can run TypeScript code, it doesn't actually type check it. You still need to use tsc for that. For vscode, we're actually using ts-go , which can fully type check all of our build scripts in well under a second. It's pretty amazing to be able to run node build/hygiene.ts directly. Switching fully to TypeScript also lets us modernize and bring type safety to our build scripts, which will make it much easier to understand and make changes to them. Plus it enabled us to delete around 15,000 lines of compiled JS code that we previously had to keep checked in! Copilot extensions unification Setting : chat.extensionUnification.enabled We have fully rolled out inline suggestions to be served from the GitHub Copilot Chat extension. As part of this change, the GitHub Copilot extension will be disabled by default for all users. If you run into any issues with inline suggestions, please report them. You can temporarily revert to the previous behavior by setting chat.extensionUnification.enabled to false , which reenables the GitHub Copilot extension. Note that we are planning to fully deprecate the GitHub Copilot extension in January 2026, at which point the chat.extensionUnification.enabled setting will also be removed. Notable fixes vscode#233635 - Add an action to close other windows vscode#262817 - Running "Move Editor into Previous Group" from the left-most group should create a new group to the left vscode#264569 - Setting and removing window.activeBorder color does not reset the window border color vscode#140186 - Cannot open local terminal when remote container is opened as a workspace vscode#228359 - Relaunching the terminal will often just close the terminal vscode#232420 - Terminal Cursor is at the wrong place with Python3.13 vscode#247568 - Terminal Ctrl+Click on a file with colon in filename does not open the file, preceding zeroes are deleted vscode#275011 - Getting strange terminal message when opening VS Code in WSL on a trusted workspace vscode#275417 - Tasks with reveal:never, close:true no longer work on WSL vscode#277311 - Add "X" button to remove command from "recently used" list in Command Palette vscode#282222 - SCM - improve git blame/timeline/graph hover rendering. Thanks to Stanislav Fort (Aisle Research) vscode-python-environments#1000 - Environment activation is not working reliably with "Command Prompt" Thank you Issue tracking Contributions to our issue tracking: @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) @RedCMD (RedCMD) @tamuratak (Takashi Tamura) @IllusionMH (Andrii Dieiev) @albertosantini (Alberto Santini) Contributions to vscode : @Abrifq (Arda Aydın) Fix terminal tab prompt input breaking when backticks are included PR #272425 Cleanup microsoft#272425 PR #277406 @bilogic : also recognize // #region ... as valid markers PR #278943 @busorgin (Artem Busorgin) : Set TextDecoder.ignoreBOM to true in VSBuffer PR #272389 @cannona (Aaron Cannon) : Allow "Move Editor into Previous Group" to create new group PR #275968 @DrSergei (Sergei Druzhkov) : Fix breakpoint range calculation PR #280263 @gjsjohnmurray (John Murray) : Correct non-standard capitalization of term 'status bar' in some settings (fix #277376) PR #277383 @jakebailey (Jake Bailey) : Update @types/vscode package.json too PR #277972 @JeffreyCA : Terminal suggest - include persistent options in suggestions and improve suggestion grouping PR #276409 @joelverhagen (Joel Verhagen) : Expect runtime config from NuGet MCP install PR #271770 @Josbleuet (Eric Fortin) : Fix illegal characters in Dynamic Auth Provider logger filename PR #280217 @nikdmello (Nik D'Mello) : Update katex regex for jQuery expressions in KaTeX matching PR #269635 @ramanverse (Raman) : Remove obsolete maybeMigrateCurrentSession method PR #280042 @remcohaszing (Remco Haszing) : Mark Cursor mdc files as markdown PR #276518 @SalerSimo : Fix settings boolean widget object overflow PR #278884 @SimonSiefke (Simon Siefke) fix: memory leak in breadcrumbs PR #276597 fix: memory leak in quick diff model PR #276914 fix: memory leak in breadcrumbs PR #276915 fix: memory leak in terminal process (partially) PR #276962 fix: memory leak in startup page PR #277199 fix: memory leak in terminal tabs list PR #277225 fix: memory leak with subdecorations not being disposed PR #278328 fix: possible memory leak with decoration registration PR #278331 fix: memory leak in task problem monitor PR #279093 fix: memory leak in history service PR #279246 fix: memory leak in composite bar PR #280659 @tamuratak (Takashi Tamura) Fire onDidChangeHeight after code block editor render completes. Fix #265031 PR #274691 fix: use childNodes instead of children in DOM.reset for markdown rendering. Fix #266103 PR #276890 fix: update mathInlineRegExp to correctly handle $(a+b)^2$ PR #280021 @yavanosta (Dmitry Guketlev) : Improve performance of UriIdentityService (#_273108) PR #273111 @yaxiaoliu : fix(process-explorer): find name regexp error PR #280273 Contributions to vscode-copilot-chat : @AbdelrahmanAbouelenin (ababouelenin) Adding VSC hidden family PR #1996 Merging hashes PR #2181 Enable Replace String Tool For VSC Model C. PR #2344 @cuining : Update ESLint configuration to use Node's built-in modules instead of a hard-coded restricted imports list PR #2107 @IanMatthewHuff (Ian Huff) fix any types in nullWorkspaceFileIndex PR #1964 Fix up for the GitDiffService PR #2116 @jeffreyhunter77 (Jeff Hunter) Inline completions in @vscode/chat-lib PR #2131 Fix @vscode/chat-lib install script and package PR #2134 Make capi client optional for completions in chat-lib PR #2369 Update completions fallback model id PR #2370 @joelverhagen (Joel Verhagen) : Decouple server.json formatting from VS Code core PR #1373 Contributions to vscode-js-debug : @marat-gainullin : Dereferences of undefined at various places PR #2297 Contributions to vscode-pull-request-github : @vicky1999 (Vignesh) fix: message wrapping in narrow editor panes PR #8121 feat: Display commit status icon for each commit PR #8142 feat: Add copy comment link button in PR overview PR #8150 Contributions to vscode-python : @iBug : Fix microsoft/vscode#232420 : Python REPL cursor drifting PR #25521 Contributions to vscode-python-debugger : @rchiodo (Rich Chiodo) : Update to latest debugpy PR #877 Contributions to vscode-python-environments : @zsol (Zsolt Dollenstein) : Support UvWorkspace envs too PR #1022 Contributions to language-server-protocol : @arshadrr (Arshad Riyaz) : add slang-server PR #2200 Contributions to node-native-keymap : @tmm1 (Aman Karmani) : Fix casing of msctf.h header PR #64 @yonas (Yonas Yanfa) : Update README.md - add libxkbfile as a dependency on FreeBSD PR #61 Contributions to node-pty : @42lizard (Oliver Gassner) : Add OpenBSD includes for termios and util PR #817 @huangcs427 (huangcs) : add "Enjoy Git" Real-world Uses PR #818 Contributions to python-environment-tools : @reflectronic (John Tur) : Run commands without creating a console window on Windows PR #266 @zsol (Zsolt Dollenstein) : Discover uv workspaces PR #263 On this page there are 18 sections On this page Agents Chat MCP Accessibility Editor Experience Code Editing Source Control Debugging Terminal Authentication Languages Remote Development Enterprise Contributions to extensions Proposed APIs Engineering Notable fixes Thank you Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://devbrasil.forem.com/arnas_sandnes_aea6f43efd5/comment/2g4ai | Czy gry komputerowe straciły dla Ciebie urok? Szukasz czegoś nowego i ekscytu... - Devs Brasileiros Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account Devs Brasileiros Close Discussion on: AjTiTi #41 - Postpandemiczne przemyślenia o pracy zdalnej View post Collapse Expand Arnas Sandnes Arnas Sandnes Arnas Sandnes Follow Joined Jun 24, 2024 • Jun 24 '24 Dropdown menu Copy link Hide Czy gry komputerowe straciły dla Ciebie urok? Szukasz czegoś nowego i ekscytującego? Odkryj świat hazardu online i poczuj dreszczyk emocji! Zagraj w ulubione gry karciane i stołowe, spróbuj szczęścia na automatach, a może skusisz się na zakładu sportowe? Wejdź na onlinekasyno-polis.pl i odkryj najlepsze kasyna online w Polsce! Like comment: Like comment: 1 like Like Comment button Reply Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Devs Brasileiros — A comunidade para pessoas desenvolvedoras no Brasil. Discutimos código, carreira, IA e eventos locais Home About Contact Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . Devs Brasileiros © 2016 - 2026. O ponto de encontro da comunidade dev brasileira Log in Create account | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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https://forem.dev/terms | Forem.dev Migration - Forem Core Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account Forem Core Close Forem.dev Migration We have designated core.forem.com as the new space for news and discussion with regards to the Forem project . We have been through a journey with many iterations and a fresh start seemed ideal. Because forem.dev was never well managed, we felt like it was not worth entirely preserving it. However, if there is any content you might be specifically interested in, you can contact yo@forem.com and we will try to help provide it. Please feel free to post on core.forem.com if you have any questions about the project. For more info, check out our initial post: A new space for discussions surrounding the Forem core open source project Ben Halpern for The DEV Team ・ May 8 #announcement We are happy to have you on this open source journey! 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV Forem Core — Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Home About Contact Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . Forem Core © 2016 - 2026. Community building community Log in Create account | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://dev.to/icdpl/icd-weekend-4-wizja-nowych-wyszukiwarek-yt-dokleja-sledzace-ciagi-znakow-a-firefox-je-usuwa | ICD Weekend #4 - Wizja nowych wyszukiwarek. YT dokleja śledzące ciągi znaków, a Firefox je usuwa - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. Popcorn Movies and TV Follow Movie and TV enthusiasm, criticism and everything in-between. DUMB DEV Community Follow Memes and software development shitposting Design Community Follow Web design, graphic design and everything in-between Security Forem Follow Your central hub for all things security. From ethical hacking and CTFs to GRC and career development, for beginners and pros alike Golf Forem Follow A community of golfers and golfing enthusiasts Crypto Forem Follow A collaborative community for all things Crypto—from Bitcoin to protocol development and DeFi to NFTs and market analysis. Parenting Follow A place for parents to the share the joys, challenges, and wisdom that come from raising kids. We're here for them and for each other. Forem Core Follow Discussing the core forem open source software project — features, bugs, performance, self-hosting. Maker Forem Follow A community for makers, hobbyists, and professionals to discuss Arduino, Raspberry Pi, 3D printing, and much more. HMPL.js Forem Follow For developers using HMPL.js to build fast, lightweight web apps. A space to share projects, ask questions, and discuss server-driven templating Dropdown menu Dropdown menu Skip to content Navigation menu Search Powered by Algolia Search Log in Create account DEV Community Close Internet! Czas działać (polish) Follow ICD Weekend #4 - Wizja nowych wyszukiwarek. YT dokleja śledzące ciągi znaków, a Firefox je usuwa Dec 22 '23 play W tym odcinku Kuba i Arek, opowiadają m.in. o Fediverse, przyszłości wyszukiwarek internetowych i kontrowersjach wokół Google’a. Link do źródeł uzupełniający odcinek podcastu: https://www.internet-czas-dzialac.pl/weekend-4/ Prowadzimy szkolenia, prelekcje i warsztaty z zakresu prywatności pod kątem informatycznym oraz prawniczym. Jeżeli masz pytania, propozycje lub potrzebujesz wsparcia technicznego bądź prawniczego, napisz do nas! Masz pomysł na współpracę? Znalazłeś błąd na naszej stronie internetowej lub masz ciekawy temat do poruszenia w naszym podcaście, lub na blogu? 😊 https://www.internet-czas-dzialac.pl/contact/ Episode source Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Your browser does not support the audio element. 1x initializing... × 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. Made with love and Ruby on Rails . DEV Community © 2016 - 2026. We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers. Log in Create account | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://blog.jetbrains.com/hub/ | Hub | The Hub Blog Skip to content Topics Search Language English Deutsch Español Français 日本語 한국어 Русский 简体中文 Português do Brasil Türkçe Burger menu icon IDEs CLion DataGrip DataSpell Fleet GoLand IntelliJ IDEA PhpStorm PyCharm RustRover Rider RubyMine WebStorm Plugins & Services Big Data Tools Code With Me JetBrains Platform Scala Toolbox App Writerside JetBrains AI Grazie Junie JetBrains for Data Kineto Team Tools Datalore Space TeamCity Upsource YouTrack Hub Qodana CodeCanvas Matter .NET & Visual Studio .NET Tools ReSharper C++ Languages & Frameworks Kotlin Ktor MPS Amper Education & Research JetBrains Academy Research Company Company Blog Security Hub Integration Across Team Collaboration Tools Follow Follow: X X RSS RSS Get Hub for free All News Features Insights Hub update regarding Log4j2 vulnerability Update from December 21, 2021, 23:00 (GMT +0). To the best of our knowledge, the newly discovered CVE-2021-45105 does not affect YouTrack or Hub. To address another vulnerability, CVE-2021-45046, we released YouTrack 2021.4.36179 and Hub 2021.1.14108 on December 16, 2021. Please download and in… Elena Pishkova Hub Now With Customizable User Profiles Hub 2021.1 is starting this year off with a new customization feature, which allows users to add custom fields to user profiles. It also adds a set of authentication enhancements, like the ability to specify multiple domains that you can use to log in with Google authentication and PKCE (proof key f… Anastasia Bartasheva Hub Adds Organizations You can read this blog post in other languages: Hub 2020.1 introduces Organizations, an ability to suggest community translations in-context – right from the user interface, and Swagger support. Please read ahead to learn more. (more…)… Elena Pishkova Hub 2019.1 Released! Hub 2019.1 introduces Universal 2nd Factor Authentication, Community-based Language Support, and other improvements. (more…)… Natasha Katson Important Security Notice – Vulnerability allowing permission escalation Please note that if you are a YouTrack InCloud customer, or a commercial customer of YouTrack Standalone or Upsource, you should have already received an email from us in the middle of December. No further action is required if have already seen this email. (more…)… Natasha Katson Hub 2018.4 is Released! Hub 2018.4 introduces IdP-initiated SSO for SAML, a new setting for the GitHub auth module, LDAP Group Mappings, and other improvements. (more…)… Natasha Katson Hub 2018.3 is Released! Hub 2018.3 introduces a visual redesign, two-factor authentication, global password change requests, and other improvements. (more…)… Natasha Katson Hub 2018.2 is Released! Hub 2018.2 introduces SAML Authentication Module, Throttling by Login, Personal Data Management, and other improvements. (more…)… Natasha Katson Hub 2018.1 Released! Please welcome Hub 2018.1! Hub 2018.1 introduces a project overview page, custom widgets and other improvements. (more…)… Natasha Katson Hub 2017.4 Released! Please welcome Hub 2017.4! Hub 2017.4 introduces Japanese Localization, Redesigned Projects Page, Enhanced User Tooltips, and other improvements. (more…)… Natasha Katson Azure AD Auth Module inoperative, pending fix by Microsoft What happened? Since a recent change that was applied by Microsoft, our Azure AD authentication module no longer works. Authentication requests that are sent to the Azure AD service return code 404 without an informative error message. This issue can not be fixed on our side but rather requires cha… Natasha Katson JetBrains Web UI components open-sourced Please welcome Ring UI, an open-source library full of Web UI components! Ring UI library gives you the power of complex UI controls that have been developed at JetBrains over the years. It contains over 50 React controls, ranging from simple links and buttons to sophisticated controls, such … Natasha Katson Load more Privacy & Security Terms of Use Legal Genuine tools Language English Deutsch Español Français 日本語 한국어 Русский 简体中文 Português do Brasil Türkçe Twitter Facebook Linkedin Instagram Youtube RSS Tiktok Merchandise store icon Merchandise store Copyright © 2000 JetBrains s.r.o. | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
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https://www.linkedin.com/blog/member/trust-and-safety/responsible-ai-principles | Responsible AI Principles Skip to main content Official Blog Product updates Member stories Creators Platform Information Trust and Safety Product updates Member stories Creators Platform Information Trust and Safety Sharing LinkedIn’s Responsible AI Principles Authored by Blake Lawit Chief Global Affairs & Legal Officer at LinkedIn February 22, 2023 Co-authors - Blake Lawit and Ya Xu LinkedIn was founded with a clear vision to create economic opportunity for every member of the global workforce. In 2023, we are seeing transformative advances in AI that have the potential to help us accelerate our progress toward that vision. AI is not new to LinkedIn. LinkedIn has long used AI to enhance our members’ professional experiences. By leveraging the power of AI, we help our members connect, increase productivity and achieve success in their careers. While AI has enormous potential to expand access to opportunity and ultimately transform the world of work in positive ways, the stakes are high. The use of AI comes with risks and potential for harm. That’s why, consistent with our commitment to build a trustworthy platform, we must continue to use AI responsibly. Inspired by, and aligned with, Microsoft’s leadership in Responsible AI, we are sharing the Responsible AI Principles that we use at LinkedIn to guide our work: Advance Economic Opportunity: People are at the center of what we do. AI is a tool to further our vision, empowering our members and augmenting their success and productivity. Uphold Trust: Our commitments to privacy, security and safety guide our use of AI. We take meaningful steps to reduce the potential risks of AI. Promote Fairness and Inclusion: We work to ensure that our use of AI benefits all members fairly, without causing or amplifying unfair bias. Provide Transparency: Understanding of AI starts with transparency. We seek to explain in clear and simple ways how our use of AI impacts people. Embrace Accountability: We deploy robust AI governance, including assessing and addressing potential harms and fitness for purpose, and ensuring human oversight and accountability. We are committed to learning from, and helping, others as AI best practices, norms and laws evolve. Underlying these principles is our commitment to listen and learn about how AI can continue to be a tool to accelerate progress towards economic opportunity for all. Related articles Updates to our Professional Community Policies Nov 6, 2025 Trust and safety Updates to LinkedIn's Terms of Service Blake Lawit Sep 18, 2024 Mythbusting the Feed: How We Work to Address Bias Imani Dunbar Nov 1, 2022 LinkedIn © 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines العربية (Arabic) বাংলা (Bangla) Čeština (Czech) Dansk (Danish) Deutsch (German) Ελληνικά (Greek) English (English) Español (Spanish) فارسی (Persian) Suomi (Finnish) Français (French) हिंदी (Hindi) Magyar (Hungarian) Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesian) Italiano (Italian) עברית (Hebrew) 日本語 (Japanese) 한국어 (Korean) मराठी (Marathi) Bahasa Malaysia (Malay) Nederlands (Dutch) Norsk (Norwegian) ਪੰਜਾਬੀ (Punjabi) Polski (Polish) Português (Portuguese) Română (Romanian) Русский (Russian) Svenska (Swedish) తెలుగు (Telugu) ภาษาไทย (Thai) Tagalog (Tagalog) Türkçe (Turkish) Українська (Ukrainian) Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese) 简体中文 (Chinese (Simplified)) 正體中文 (Chinese (Traditional)) Language | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/supporting/faq | Visual Studio Code FAQ Visual Studio Code Docs Updates Blog API Extensions MCP FAQ Search Search Docs Download Version 1.108 is now available! Read about the new features and fixes from December. Dismiss this update Overview Setup Overview Linux macOS Windows VS Code for the Web Raspberry Pi Network Additional Components Enterprise Uninstall Get Started VS Code Tutorial Copilot Quickstart User Interface Personalize VS Code Install Extensions Tips and Tricks Intro Videos Configure Display Language Layout Keyboard Shortcuts Settings Settings Sync Extensions Extension Marketplace Extension Runtime Security Themes Profiles Accessibility Overview Voice Interactions Command Line Interface Telemetry Edit code Basic Editing IntelliSense Code Navigation Refactoring Snippets Workspaces Overview Multi-root Workspaces Workspace Trust Build, Debug, Test Tasks Debugging Debug Configuration Testing Port Forwarding GitHub Copilot Overview Setup Quickstart Chat Overview Chat Sessions Add Context Review Edits Planning Checkpoints Tools Inline Chat Prompt Examples Chat Debug View Agents Overview Agents Tutorial Background Agents Cloud Agents Inline Suggestions Customization Overview Instructions Prompt Files Custom Agents Skills Language Models MCP Guides Prompt Engineering Context Engineering Edit Notebooks with AI Test with AI Debug with AI MCP Dev Guide Smart Actions Tips and Tricks Security FAQ Reference Cheat Sheet Settings Reference Workspace Context Source Control Overview Quickstart Staging & Committing Branches & Worktrees Repositories & Remotes Merge Conflicts Collaborate on GitHub Troubleshooting FAQ Terminal Getting Started Tutorial Terminal Basics Terminal Profiles Shell Integration Appearance Advanced Languages Overview JavaScript JSON HTML Emmet CSS, SCSS and Less TypeScript Markdown PowerShell C++ Java PHP Python Julia R Ruby Rust Go T-SQL C# .NET Polyglot Swift Node.js / JavaScript Working with JavaScript Node.js Tutorial Node.js Debugging Deploy Node.js Apps Browser Debugging Angular Tutorial React Tutorial Vue Tutorial Debugging Recipes Performance Profiling Extensions TypeScript Tutorial Compiling Editing Refactoring Debugging Python Quick Start Tutorial Run Python Code Editing Linting Formatting Debugging Environments Testing Python Interactive Django Tutorial FastAPI Tutorial Flask Tutorial Create Containers Deploy Python Apps Python in the Web Settings Reference Java Getting Started Navigate and Edit Refactoring Formatting and Linting Project Management Build Tools Run and Debug Testing Spring Boot Modernizing Java Apps Application Servers Deploy Java Apps GUI Applications Extensions FAQ C++ Intro Videos GCC on Linux GCC on Windows GCC on Windows Subsystem for Linux Clang on macOS Microsoft C++ on Windows Build with CMake CMake Tools on Linux CMake Quick Start Editing and Navigating Debugging Configure Debugging Refactoring Settings Reference Configure IntelliSense Configure IntelliSense for Cross-Compiling FAQ C# Intro Videos Get Started Navigate and Edit IntelliCode Refactoring Formatting and Linting Project Management Build Tools Package Management Run and Debug Testing FAQ Container Tools Overview Node.js Python ASP.NET Core Debug Docker Compose Registries Deploy to Azure Choose a Dev Environment Customize Develop with Kubernetes Tips and Tricks Data Science Overview Jupyter Notebooks Data Science Tutorial Python Interactive Data Wrangler Quick Start Data Wrangler PyTorch Support Azure Machine Learning Manage Jupyter Kernels Jupyter Notebooks on the Web Data science in Microsoft Fabric Intelligent Apps AI Toolkit Overview AI Toolkit Copilot tools Models Playground Agent Builder Bulk Run Evaluation Fine-tuning (Automated Setup) Fine-tuning (Project Template) Model Conversion Tracing Profiling (Windows ML) FAQ Reference File Structure Manual Model Conversion Manual Model Conversion On GPU Setup Environment Without AI Toolkit Template Project Azure Overview Getting Started Resources View Deployment VS Code for the Web - 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We've captured items here that don't fit in the other topics. If you don't see an answer to your question here, check our previously reported issues on GitHub and our release notes . Open sourcing AI in VS Code We've open sourced the GitHub Copilot Chat extension under the MIT license and are bringing relevant components into VS Code core. Read all details in our announcement blog post and first milestone update . Does this affect my current GitHub Copilot subscription? Is GitHub Copilot free now? This change does not affect current GitHub Copilot subscriptions. To use GitHub Copilot, you'll continue to need both a GitHub account, and access to a GitHub Copilot subscription. Individual developers who don't have access to Copilot through an organization or enterprise have access to the GitHub Copilot free plan ( restrictions may apply ). If that plan doesn't meet your needs, you can sign up for a Copilot paid plan or bring your own model keys . Will the GitHub Copilot backend services also be open sourced? The GitHub Copilot services are not affected and will remain closed source. What is the timeline? When can I provide a contribution to the AI experience in VS Code? We have completed the first step of this process by open sourcing the GitHub Copilot Chat extension. The source code is available in the microsoft/vscode-copilot-chat repository. In the coming months, we will bring the relevant components of the Copilot Chat extension into the core VS Code repository. Check our plan item for details and updates about the timeline. Our goal is to make the experience for contributing to our AI features as simple as contributing to any part of VS Code. As part of this, we want to make it possible to use the Copilot backend services for debugging and testing purposes when contributing. Check the CONTRIBUTING.md file for details on how to contribute. Why integrate GitHub Copilot into the core VS Code repository? In the time since GitHub Copilot was first released, it's become clear that AI-powered tools are core to how we write code. From usage telemetry, we can see that more users are actually using AI features in VS Code than some other features like debugging or testing. Making AI functionality a core part of VS Code is a reaffirmation in our belief that working in the open leads to a better product for our users and fosters a diverse ecosystem of extensions. I'm an extension author. How am I affected? We maintain backwards compatibility for stable APIs. You should not expect any impact on your extension. We're continuously evolving and expanding the VS Code extension APIs based on feedback from extension authors. If you need additional APIs to make your extension successful, we would love to hear from you – please file an API request in the microsoft/vscode repo . I already use other AI coding extensions in VS Code (Cline, Roo Code, ...). How does this affect me? You can continue to use these extensions in VS Code! We love that the community is building extensions to make the developer experience in VS Code better. To improve the experience for other AI extensions, we're constantly adding APIs like the Language Model API for directly calling language models from an extension, the Tools API for interacting with language model tools and integrating with the built-in or your own agents, or the Shell Execution API for running and interacting with terminal commands (particularly useful for agentic experiences). Going forward, we are planning to add even more APIs to meet the needs of extension authors. Will this change anything about how you collect data? No, nothing is changing. By open sourcing GitHub Copilot Chat, we are making it fully transparent how we collect data and enable you to verify this in the source code. Learn more about telemetry in VS Code and the GitHub Copilot Trust Center . How will the VS Code team prioritize between AI features and non-AI features in future releases? We believe that AI-powered tools are core to how we write code. We invest in both AI features and improving the core editor experience. This is also reflected in a 50/50% split of the team working on AI versus other features. Many of the non-AI features might not always be as visible to the user, such as performance, security, accessibility, Electron updates, and more. Will bringing AI features into the core VS Code repository affect the (startup) performance of VS Code? Performance is our core priority and we are committed to maintaining the performance of VS Code as we integrate AI features. In addition, if you don't enable AI functionality in VS Code, no associated background processes will run that could affect performance. Can I disable AI functionality in VS Code? You can disable the built-in AI features in VS Code with the chat.disableAIFeatures setting, similar to how you configure other features in VS Code. This disables and hides features like chat or inline suggestions in VS Code and disables the Copilot extensions. You can configure the setting at the workspace or user level. Alternatively, use the Learn How to Hide AI Features action from the Chat menu in the title bar to access the setting. Note If you have previously disabled the built-in AI features, your choice is respected upon updating to a new version of VS Code. If I disable AI functionality in VS Code, is my data still sent to Microsoft? No, if you disable AI functionality in VS Code or if you don't login to your Copilot subscription from VS Code, your data is not sent to the Copilot backend services. Learn more about telemetry in VS Code and the GitHub Copilot Trust Center . Are the models that VS Code uses in the Copilot extension open source (OSS)? No. The models used by GitHub Copilot are licensed separately, and that does not change. In fact, most of those models are from third parties such as OpenAI, Anthropic and Google... What is the difference between Visual Studio Code and Visual Studio IDE? Visual Studio Code is a streamlined code editor with support for development operations like debugging, task running, and version control. It aims to provide just the tools a developer needs for a quick code-build-debug cycle and leaves more complex workflows to fuller featured IDEs, such as Visual Studio IDE . Is VS Code free? Yes, VS Code is free for private or commercial use. See the product license for details. If you don't yet have a Copilot subscription, you can use Copilot for free by signing up for the Copilot Free plan and get a monthly limit of inline suggestions and chat interactions. Platform support Which OSs are supported? VS Code runs on macOS, Linux, and Windows. See the Requirements documentation for the supported versions. You can find more platform specific details in the Setup overview . Can I run VS Code on older Windows versions? Microsoft ended support and is no longer providing security updates for Windows 7 , Windows 8, and Windows 8.1 . VS Code desktop versions starting with 1.71 (August 2022) no longer run on Windows 7 and starting with 1.80 (June 2023) will no longer run on Windows 8 and 8.1. You will need to upgrade to a newer Windows version to use later versions of VS Code. VS Code will no longer provide product updates or security fixes on old Windows versions. VS Code version 1.70.3 is the last available release for Windows 7 users and version 1.79 will be the last available release for Windows 8 and 8.1 users. You can learn more about upgrading your Windows version at support.microsoft.com . Additionally, 32-bit OEM support has been dropped with Windows 10, version 2004. The last stable VS Code version to support Windows 32-bit is 1.83 (September 2023). You will need to update to the 64-bit release. Can I run VS Code on old macOS versions? VS Code desktop version starting with 1.105 (September 2025) is deprecating support for macOS Big Sur (version 11.0 and older). Starting with VS Code 1.107 (November 2025), we will stop updating VS Code on macOS Big Sur (version 11.0 and older). You will need to upgrade to a newer macOS version to use later versions of VS Code. VS Code will no longer provide product updates or security fixes on macOS Big Sur (versions 11.0 and older) and VS Code version 1.106 will be the last available release for macOS Big Sur (11.0 and older). You can learn more about upgrading your macOS version at support.apple.com . Can I run VS Code on older Linux distributions? Starting with VS Code release 1.86.1 (January 2024), VS Code desktop is only compatible with Linux distributions based on glibc 2.28 or later, for example, Debian 10, RHEL 8, or Ubuntu 20.04. If you are unable to upgrade your Linux distribution, the recommended alternative is to use our web client . If you would like to use the desktop version, then you can download the VS Code release 1.85 from here . Depending on your platform, make sure to disable updates to stay on that version. A good recommendation is to set up the installation with Portable Mode . Can I run a portable version of VS Code? Yes, VS Code has a Portable Mode that lets you keep settings and data in the same location as your installation, for example, on a USB drive. Telemetry and crash reporting How to disable telemetry reporting VS Code collects usage data and sends it to Microsoft to help improve our products and services. Read our privacy statement and telemetry documentation to learn more. If you don't want to send usage data to Microsoft, you can set the telemetry.telemetryLevel user setting to off . From File > Preferences > Settings , search for telemetry , and set the Telemetry: Telemetry Level setting to off . This will silence all telemetry events from VS Code going forward. Important Notice : VS Code gives you the option to install Microsoft and third party extensions. These extensions may be collecting their own usage data and are not controlled by the telemetry.telemetryLevel setting. Consult the specific extension's documentation to learn about its telemetry reporting. How to disable experiments VS Code uses experiments to try out new features or progressively roll them out. Our experimentation framework calls out to a Microsoft-owned service and is therefore disabled when telemetry is disabled. However, if you want to disable experiments regardless of your telemetry preferences, you may set the workbench.enableExperiments user setting to false . From File > Preferences > Settings , search for experiments , and uncheck the Workbench: Enable Experiments setting. This will prevent VS Code from calling out to the service and opt out of any ongoing experiments. How to disable crash reporting VS Code collects data about any crashes that occur and sends it to Microsoft to help improve our products and services. Read our privacy statement and telemetry documentation to learn more. If you don't want to send crash data to Microsoft, you can change the telemetry.telemetryLevel user setting to off . From File > Preferences > Settings , search for telemetry , and set the Telemetry: Telemetry Level setting to off . This will silence all telemetry events including crash reporting from VS Code. You will need to restart VS Code for the setting change to take effect. GDPR and VS Code Now that the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is in effect, we want to take this opportunity to reiterate that we take privacy very seriously. That's both for Microsoft as a company and specifically within the VS Code team. To support GDPR: The VS Code product notifies all users that they can opt out of telemetry collection. The team actively reviews and classifies all telemetry sent (documented in our OSS codebase ). There are valid data retention policies in place for any data collected, for example crash dumps. You can learn more about VS Code's GDPR compliance in the telemetry documentation . What online services does VS Code use? Beyond crash reporting and telemetry, VS Code uses online services for various other purposes such as downloading product updates, finding, installing, and updating extensions, or providing Natural Language Search within the Settings editor. You can learn more in Managing online services . You can choose to turn on/off features that use these services. From File > Preferences > Settings , and type the tag @tag:usesOnlineServices . This will display all settings that control the usage of online services and you can individually switch them on or off. Licensing Location You can find the VS Code licenses, third party notices and Chromium Open Source credit list under your VS Code installation location resources\app folder. VS Code's ThirdPartyNotices.txt , Chromium's Credits_*.html , and VS Code's English language LICENSE.txt are available under resources\app . Localized versions of LICENSE.txt by language ID are under resources\app\licenses . Why does Visual Studio Code have a different license than the vscode GitHub repository? To learn why Visual Studio Code, the product, has a different license than the open-source vscode GitHub repository , see issue #60 for a detailed explanation. What is the difference between the vscode repository and the Microsoft Visual Studio Code distribution? The github.com/microsoft/vscode repository ( Code - OSS ) is where we develop the Visual Studio Code product. Not only do we write code and work on issues there, we also publish our roadmap and monthly iteration and endgame plans. The source code is available to everyone under a standard MIT license . Visual Studio Code is a distribution of the Code - OSS repository with Microsoft specific customizations (including source code), released under a traditional Microsoft product license . See the Visual Studio Code and 'Code - OSS' Differences article for more details. What does "Built on Open Source" mean? Microsoft Visual Studio Code is a Microsoft licensed distribution of 'Code - OSS' that includes Microsoft proprietary assets (such as icons) and features (Visual Studio Marketplace integration, small aspects of enabling Remote Development). While these additions make up a very small percentage of the overall distribution code base, it is more accurate to say that Visual Studio Code is "built" on open source, rather than "is" open source, because of these differences. More information on what each distribution includes can be found in the Visual Studio Code and 'Code - OSS' Differences article. Extensions Are all VS Code extensions open source? Extension authors are free to choose a license that fits their business needs. While many extension authors have opted to release their source code under an open-source license, some extensions like Wallaby.js , Google Cloud Code , and the VS Code Remote Development extensions use proprietary licenses. At Microsoft, we have a mix of open and closed source extensions. Reliance on existing proprietary source code or libraries, source code that crosses into Microsoft licensed tools or services (e.g., the C# DevKit extension uses the Visual Studio subscription license model, see License ), and business model differences across the entirety of Microsoft may result in extensions choosing a proprietary license. You can find a list of Microsoft contributed Visual Studio Code extensions and their source code licenses in the Microsoft Extension Licenses article. How do I find the license for an extension? Most extensions will have a link to their license on the Marketplace page (their "Read Me" document), found on the right column under Resources . If you don't find a link, you may find the license in the extension's repository if it is public, or you can contact the extension author through the Q & A section of the Marketplace. Can I use a Microsoft extension outside of VS Code? No. While the source code for an extension from Microsoft may be open source, we do not license extensions from Microsoft or its affiliates that are published to and acquired from the Visual Studio Marketplace for use outside of the Visual Studio family of products: Microsoft Visual Studio, Visual Studio Code, GitHub Codespaces, Azure DevOps, Azure DevOps Server, and successor products and services offered by us and Microsoft affiliates, such as GitHub, Inc. We build, test, deploy, and support these extensions and services only in the Visual Studio family of products, to ensure they meet our security and quality standards. We do not do this for extensions elsewhere, including those built on a fork of the Code - OSS Repository . Please see Conditions: Use Rights for Marketplace/NuGet Offerings in the Visual Studio Marketplace Terms of Service for more information. I can't access the Visual Studio Marketplace from product << fill in the blank >>, why not? We provide the Visual Studio Marketplace for use only by the Visual Studio family of products: Microsoft Visual Studio, Visual Studio Code, GitHub Codespaces, Azure DevOps, Azure DevOps Server, and successor products and services offered by us and Microsoft affiliates, such as GitHub, Inc. Therefore, alternative products including those built on a fork of the Code - OSS Repository , are not permitted to access the Visual Studio Marketplace. We do this to protect the security and quality of the ecosystem, including the following measures: Extensions run in the context and with the permissions of the product, and they might contain executable code. The Marketplace vets every extension for security and to prevent them from performing malicious activity. When you install an extension with a product in the Visual Studio family, you know that it has been vetted to run in that context. When a malicious extension is reported and verified, or a vulnerability is found in an extension dependency, the extension is removed from the Marketplace, added to a block list, and automatically uninstalled by VS Code. Microsoft spends considerable resources in running, maintaining, and securing this global online service. Products in the Visual Studio family are designed to access the Marketplace in a secure and reliable manner, so that the Marketplace is available when you need it. Extensions might integrate deeply with the product. The Marketplace ensures that we maintain API compatibility and that extensions use the product's extensions APIs correctly. This helps ensure that extensions you install work correctly across version updates. See #31168 for additional details on this topic. Why should I install extensions from the Visual Studio Marketplace? Installing extensions from the Visual Studio Marketplace has many advantages over installing them from other sources. The Visual Studio Marketplace employs several mechanisms to protect you from installing malicious extensions, including malware scanning, dynamic detection, publisher verification, and more. When you install extensions from a different source, there is no guarantee that the extension is safe to run in your context. When a malicious extension is reported and verified, or a vulnerability is found in an extension dependency, the extension is removed from the Marketplace, added to a block list , and automatically uninstalled by VS Code. The Marketplace enables you to easily find, install, and update extensions. When an update is available, for example because of a security fix, VS Code automatically installs the updated version. Extensions might integrate deeply with the product. The Marketplace ensures that we maintain API compatibility and that extensions use the product's extensions APIs correctly. This helps ensure that extensions you install work correctly across version updates. Report an issue with a VS Code extension For bugs, feature requests or to contact an extension author, you should use the links available in the Visual Studio Code Marketplace or use Help: Report Issue from the Command Palette. However, if there is an issue where an extension does not follow our code of conduct, for example it includes profanity, pornography or presents a risk to the user, then we have an email alias to report the issue . Once the mail is received, our Marketplace team will look into an appropriate course of action, up to and including unpublishing the extension. VS Code versions How do I find my current VS Code version? You can find the VS Code version information in the About dialog box. On macOS, go to Code > About Visual Studio Code . On Windows and Linux, go to Help > About . The VS Code version is the first Version number listed and has the version format 'major.minor.release', for example '1.100.0'. Previous release versions You can find links to some release downloads at the top of a version's release notes: If you need a type of installation not listed there, you can manually download via the following URLs: Download type URL Windows x64 System installer https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/win32-x64/stable Windows x64 User installer https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/win32-x64-user/stable Windows x64 zip https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/win32-x64-archive/stable Windows x64 CLI https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/cli-win32-x64/stable Windows Arm64 System installer https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/win32-arm64/stable Windows Arm64 User installer https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/win32-arm64-user/stable Windows Arm64 zip https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/win32-arm64-archive/stable Windows Arm64 CLI https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/cli-win32-arm64/stable macOS Universal https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/darwin-universal/stable macOS Intel chip https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/darwin/stable macOS Intel chip CLI https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/cli-darwin-x64/stable macOS Apple silicon https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/darwin-arm64/stable macOS Apple silicon CLI https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/cli-darwin-arm64/stable Linux x64 https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/linux-x64/stable Linux x64 debian https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/linux-deb-x64/stable Linux x64 rpm https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/linux-rpm-x64/stable Linux x64 snap https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/linux-snap-x64/stable Linux x64 CLI https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/cli-linux-x64/stable Linux Arm32 https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/linux-armhf/stable Linux Arm32 debian https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/linux-deb-armhf/stable Linux Arm32 rpm https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/linux-rpm-armhf/stable Linux Arm32 CLI https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/cli-linux-armhf/stable Linux Arm64 https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/linux-arm64/stable Linux Arm64 debian https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/linux-deb-arm64/stable Linux Arm64 rpm https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/linux-rpm-arm64/stable Linux Arm64 CLI https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/cli-linux-arm64/stable Substitute the specific release you want in the {version} placeholder. For example, to download the Linux Arm64 debian version for 1.83.1, you would use https://update.code.visualstudio.com/1.83.1/linux-deb-arm64/stable You can use the version string latest , if you'd like to always download the latest VS Code stable version. Windows 32-bit versions Windows x86 32-bit versions are no longer actively supported after release 1.83 and could pose a security risk. Download type URL Windows x86 System installer https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/win32/stable Windows x86 User installer https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/win32-user/stable Windows x86 zip https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/win32-archive/stable Windows x86 CLI https://update.code.visualstudio.com/{version}/cli-win32-ia32/stable Prerelease versions Want an early peek at new VS Code features? You can try prerelease versions of VS Code by installing the "Insiders" build. The Insiders build installs side by side to your stable VS Code install and has isolated settings, configurations, and extensions. The Insiders build is updated nightly so you'll get the latest bug fixes and feature updates from the day before. To install the Insiders build, go to the Insiders download page . How do I opt out of VS Code auto-updates? By default, VS Code is set up to auto-update for macOS and Windows users when we release new updates. If you do not want to get automatic updates, you can set the Update: Mode setting from default to none . To modify the update mode, go to File > Preferences > Settings , search for update mode and change the setting to none . If you use the JSON editor for your settings, add the following line: "update.mode" : "none" You can install a previous release of VS Code by uninstalling your current version and then installing the download provided at the top of a specific release notes page. Note: On Linux: If the VS Code repository was installed correctly then your system package manager should handle auto-updating in the same way as other packages on the system. See Installing VS Code on Linux . Opt out of extension updates By default, VS Code will also auto-update extensions as new versions become available. If you do not want extensions to automatically update, you can clear the Extensions: Auto Update check box in the Settings editor ( ⌘, (Windows, Linux Ctrl+, ) ). If you use the JSON editor to modify your settings, add the following line: "extensions.autoUpdate" : false Where can I find the Visual Studio Code icons? Are there guidelines for using the icons and names? You can download the official Visual Studio Code icons and read the usage guidelines at Icons and names usage guidelines . What is a VS Code "workspace"? A VS Code "workspace" is usually just your project root folder. VS Code uses the "workspace" concept in order to scope project configurations such as project-specific settings as well as config files for debugging and tasks . Workspace files are stored at the project root in a .vscode folder. You can also have more than one root folder in a VS Code workspace through a feature called Multi-root workspaces . You can learn more in the What is a VS Code "workspace"? article. Problems and issues Installation appears to be corrupt [Unsupported] VS Code does a background check to detect if the installation has been changed on disk and if so, you will see the text [Unsupported] in the title bar. This is done since some extensions directly modify (patch) the VS Code product in such a way that is semi-permanent (until the next update) and this can cause hard to reproduce issues. We are not trying to block VS Code patching, but we want to raise awareness that patching VS Code means you are running an unsupported version. Reinstalling VS Code will replace the modified files and silence the warning. You may also see the [Unsupported] message if VS Code files have been mistakenly quarantined or removed by anti-virus software (see issue #94858 for an example). Check your anti-virus software settings and reinstall VS Code to repair the missing files. Resolving shell environment fails When VS Code is launched from a terminal (for example, via code . ), it has access to environment settings defined in your .bashrc or .zshrc files. This means features like tasks or debug targets also have access to those settings. However, when launching from your platform's user interface (for example, the VS Code icon in the macOS dock), you normally are not running in the context of a shell and you don't have access to those environment settings. This means that depending on how you launch VS Code, you may not have the same environment. To work around this, when launched via a UI gesture, VS Code will start a small process to run (or "resolve") the shell environment defined in your, .bashrc , .zshrc , or PowerShell profile files. If, after a configurable timeout (via application.shellEnvironmentResolutionTimeout , defaults to 10 seconds), the shell environment has still not been resolved or resolving failed for any other reason, VS Code will abort the "resolve" process, launch without your shell's environment settings, and you will see an error like the following: If the error message indicates that resolving your shell environment took too long, the steps below can help you investigate what might be causing slowness. You can also increase the timeout by configuring the application.shellEnvironmentResolutionTimeout setting. But keep in mind that increasing this value means you will have to wait longer to use some of the features in VS Code, such as extensions. If you see other errors, please create an issue to get help. Investigate slow shell initialization The process outlined below may help you identify which parts of your shell initialization are taking the most time: Open your shell's startup file (for example, in VS Code by typing ~/.bashrc or ~/.zshrc in Quick Open ( ⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+P ) )). Selectively comment out potentially long running operations (such as nvm if you find that). Save and fully restart VS Code. Continue commenting out operations until the error disappears. Note : While nvm is a powerful and useful Node.js package manager, it can cause slow shell startup times, if being run during shell initialization. You might consider package manager alternatives such as asdf or search on the internet for nvm performance suggestions. Launch VS Code from a terminal If modifying your shell environment isn't practical, you can avoid VS Code's resolving shell environment phase by launching VS Code directly from a fully initialized terminal. Typing code from an open terminal will launch VS Code with your last workspace. Typing code . will launch VS Code open to the current folder. VS Code is blank? The Electron shell used by Visual Studio Code has trouble with some GPU (graphics processing unit) hardware acceleration. If VS Code is displaying a blank (empty) main window, you can try disabling GPU acceleration when launching VS Code by adding the Electron --disable-gpu command-line switch. code --disable-gpu If this happened after an update, deleting the GPUCache directory can resolve the issue. rm -r ~/.config/Code/GPUCache VS Code gets unresponsive right after opening a folder When you open a folder, VS Code will search for typical project files to offer you additional tooling (for example, the solution picker in the Status bar to open a solution). If you open a folder with lots of files, the search can take a large amount of time and CPU resources during which VS Code might be slow to respond. We plan to improve this in the future but for now you can exclude folders from the explorer via the files.exclude setting and they will not be searched for project files: "files.exclude" : { "**/largeFolder" : true } Technical support channels You can ask questions and search for answers on Stack Overflow and enter issues and feature requests directly in our GitHub repository . If you'd like to contact a professional support engineer, you can open a ticket with the Microsoft assisted support team . 01/08/2026 On this page there are 14 sections On this page Open sourcing AI in VS Code What is the difference between Visual Studio Code and Visual Studio IDE? Is VS Code free? Platform support Telemetry and crash reporting GDPR and VS Code What online services does VS Code use? Licensing Extensions VS Code versions Where can I find the Visual Studio Code icons? What is a VS Code "workspace"? Problems and issues Technical support channels Support Privacy Manage Cookies Terms of Use License | 2026-01-13T08:48:35 |
https://ruul.io/blog/do-freelancers-need-to-hire-an-expert-for-taxes#$%7Bid%7D | Should Freelancers Work with a Tax Expert? Product Payment Requests Get paid anywhere. Sell Services Make your services buyable Sell Products Create once sell forever Subscriptions Get paid on repeat Ruul Space Your personel storefront. One link for everything you offer. Learn more Pricing Resources Partner Programs Referral Program Get 1% for life. Seriously. Affiliate Program Bring users, get paid Partners Let’s grow together. More Blog About us Support Brand Kit For Customers Log in Sign up For Businesses Login Sign up get paid Do Freelancers Need to Hire an Expert for Taxes? Managing taxes as a freelancer can be challenging due to changing laws. Read our article to find out if you need a tax expert to fulfill your financial obligations! Canan Başer 5 min read RUUL FOR INDEPENDENCE You chose independence.We make sure you keep it. Sell your time, your talent, whatever you create or build always on your terms. Get started See Example This is also a heading This is a heading Key Points Among the many advantages freelancing offers are freedom, independence, and the chance to follow your interests. Still, it also presents a set of difficulties, one of which taxes are among the most demanding. As a freelancer, handling taxes may be challenging considering the many laws, guidelines, and possible deductions. Many freelancers question if they should pay an expert for taxes. Let's investigate this thoroughly to aid you in determining if hiring expert tax help is the best course of action for your independent company. Clarifying the Foundations of Freelancer Taxes Knowing what handling taxes as a freelancer involves can help you decide if you need to see an expert. Unlike regular workers, freelancers are in charge of paying their taxes and reporting. 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If processing taxes is taking time away from your freelance job or personal life, hiring a tax expert may save you time and help you avoid stress. If you have prior tax issues like mistakes, audits, or penalties and want to assure, hiring a tax professional will assist you to guarantee a better tax filing process or prevent repeating past mistakes. Choosing the Suitable Tax Advisor If you choose to consult a tax professional, you need to make sure you select the right one. These professionals use their necessary expertise and skills to handle challenging tax situations. Choose a tax adviser with experience in freelancing tax handling. They will come to know the specific challenges and opportunities connected to freelancing. Alternatives to Hiring a Tax Consultant Should engaging a tax professional prove impractical, there are several ways you could properly handle your taxes. Numerous freelance tax software programs are available to guide you through the freelance tax filing process. These simple tools may help with credit and deduction identification. Included are TurboTax, H&R Block, TaxAct. Invest time learning freelancer taxes. There are many books, seminars, and digital resources available for freelancers managing taxes. Join professional networks or freelancing groups where you may consult others and exchange ideas. These systems may provide help and understanding of proper tax management. How Can Ruul Help? Freelancers managing taxes often find it difficult and time-consuming. Although employing a tax professional is not always required, it may have major advantages particularly if your financial position is complicated or you lack tax understanding. Ruul provides useful tools and services to ease tax administration for freelancers looking for more help and resources. Ruul lets independent contractors simply and fast prepare tax-inclusive invoices. We can help simplify your freelancing experience whether your needs are for support with invoicing, money collecting, or tax liability understanding. Ruul also allows payout crypto choices, thereby allowing independent contractors to be paid in their chosen cryptocurrency. For tailored help, contact our Customer Support team. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Canan Başer Developing and implementing creative growth strategies. At Ruul, I focus on strengthening our brand and delivering real value to our global community through impactful content and marketing projects. More Freelance taxes in the USA - A to Z guide Dive into the A to Z guide of freelance taxes in the USA. Navigate tax season like a pro and maximize your earnings! Read more How Freelancers Monetize Using Link-in-Bio Platforms Discover how freelancers and creators use link-in-bio platforms like Ruul Space to monetize their work. Boost your income globally today. Read more How to politely ask clients for late payments (5 email samples) Is your customer taking a long time to pay? Learn how to ask for payments professionally. Read more MORE THAN 120,000 Independents Over 120,000 independents trust Ruul to sell their services, digital products, and securely manage their payments. FROM 190 Countries Truly global coverage: trusted across 190 countries with seamless payouts available in 140 currencies. PROCESSED $200m+ of Transactions Over $200M successfully processed, backed by an 8-year legacy of secure, reliable transactions trusted by independents worldwide. FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS Everything you need to know. Get clear, straightforward answers to the most common questions about using Ruul. hey@ruul.io What is Ruul? Ruul is a merchant-of-record platform helping freelancers and creators globally sell services, digital products, subscriptions, and easily get paid. Who is Ruul for? Ruul is designed for freelancers, creators, and independent professionals who want a simple way to sell online and get paid globally. How does Ruul work? Open an account, complete a quick verification (KYC), and link your payout account. Then, start selling through your store or send payment requests to customers instantly. How does pricing work? Signing up is free. There are no subscription or hidden fees. Ruul charges a small commission only when you sell or get paid through the platform. What is a Merchant of Record? A merchant of record is the legal seller responsible for processing payments, handling taxes, and managing compliance for each transaction. What can I sell on Ruul? You can sell services, digital products, license keys, online courses, subscriptions, and digital memberships. How do I get paid on Ruul? Add your preferred bank account, digital wallet, or receive payouts in stablecoins as crypto. Funds arrive within 24 hours after a payout is triggered. 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https://dev.to/endykaufman/my-dashboard-kak-ia-prievratil-staryie-android-ustroistva-v-krossplatformiennyie-dashbordy-s-pomoshchiu-ai-1dh9 | My Dashboard: как я превратил старые Android-устройства в кроссплатформенные дашборды с помощью AI и типобезопасного fullstack - DEV Community Forem Feed Follow new Subforems to improve your feed DEV Community Follow A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Future Follow News and discussion of science and technology such as AI, VR, cryptocurrency, quantum computing, and more. Open Forem Follow A general discussion space for the Forem community. If it doesn't have a home elsewhere, it belongs here Gamers Forem Follow An inclusive community for gaming enthusiasts Music Forem Follow From composing and gigging to gear, hot music takes, and everything in between. Vibe Coding Forem Follow Discussing AI software development, and showing off what we're building. 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Report Abuse ILshat Khamitov Posted on Jan 11 My Dashboard: как я превратил старые Android-устройства в кроссплатформенные дашборды с помощью AI и типобезопасного fullstack # webdev # programming # ai # javascript my-dashboard (2 Part Series) 1 My Dashboard 2 My Dashboard: как я превратил старые Android-устройства в кроссплатформенные дашборды с помощью AI и типобезопасного fullstack Введение У меня дома лежали несколько старых Android-устройств. Рабочие, но без дела. Я задумался: «А что если их использовать как интерактивные дашборды?» — и решил реализовать веб + мобильное приложение , где устройства показывают информацию и позволяют вводить данные. В разработке активно помогал AI-ассистент Qoder , который написал большую часть кода, а я корректировал ошибки и адаптировал под проект. Цель проекта Основная цель: типобезопасный fullstack , где фронт автоматически подтягивает типы с бэка через TypeScript без генерации SDK. Второстепенная цель: кроссплатформенное приложение , где часть кода и логики используется одновременно на вебе и мобильных устройствах. Технологический стек Backend : tRPC + Zod схемы Frontend : AnalogJS + Formly (SSR, генерация форм с серверной валидацией) Mobile : Ionic + Capacitor (поддержка старых Android, интеграция с веб-виджетами) AI : генерация виджетов, форм и части UI (~70% кода) Архитектура и подход Все виджеты используют Zod схемы , которые автоматически подтягиваются на фронт для генерации форм. Формы на фронте получают серверные ошибки валидации прямо в поля формы. Для SSR пришлось решать несколько нестандартных задач: Кэширование между SSR и фронтом иногда срабатывало некорректно → отключил transfer cache . Добавил возможность подмены fetch для передачи куки и токенов авторизации. Частично решены кейсы авторизованных и неавторизованных запросов при SSR. На мобильной части с Capacitor/Ionic столкнулся с: Поддержкой старых Android SDK JS-версией QR-сканеров, так как встроенные не работали Шарингом тем и виджетов между вебом и мобильной частью Что удалось достичь в MVP Минимальный дашборд с несколькими виджетами, полностью кроссплатформенный (веб + мобильное приложение) Настроен CI/CD для деплоя веба и мобильного приложения Частичная поддержка SSR + авторизация Генерация UI и бизнес-логики с помощью AI Быстрое прототипирование MVP всего за 1,5 месяца Выводы и инсайты AI ускоряет разработку : 70% кода было сгенерировано, а я сосредоточился на архитектуре и интеграции. Типобезопасный fullstack работает : фронт подтягивает все типы автоматически, без ручной генерации SDK. Кроссплатформенность возможна , если правильно спроектировать общие виджеты и бизнес-логику. SSR + авторизация — нюансная тема, но с отключением transfer cache и подменой fetch можно решать кейсы авторизации. Ресурсы и ссылки Онлайн версия: https://site15-my-dashboard.vercel.app Репозиторий: https://github.com/site15/my-dashboard Статьи о проекте: Хабр Dev.to my-dashboard (2 Part Series) 1 My Dashboard 2 My Dashboard: как я превратил старые Android-устройства в кроссплатформенные дашборды с помощью AI и типобезопасного fullstack Top comments (0) Subscribe Personal Trusted User Create template Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Submit Preview Dismiss Code of Conduct • Report abuse Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink . Hide child comments as well Confirm For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse ILshat Khamitov Follow Principal Engineer · Backend Architecture · NestJS Location Ufa, Russia Education Tomsk State University of Control Systems and Radioelectronics Work Software Developer Joined Jul 1, 2019 Trending on DEV Community Hot If a problem can be solved without AI, does AI actually make it better? # ai # architecture # discuss AI should not be in Code Editors # programming # ai # productivity # discuss What was your win this week??? # weeklyretro # discuss 💎 DEV Diamond Sponsors Thank you to our Diamond Sponsors for supporting the DEV Community Google AI is the official AI Model and Platform Partner of DEV Neon is the official database partner of DEV Algolia is the official search partner of DEV DEV Community — A space to discuss and keep up software development and manage your software career Home DEV++ Podcasts Videos DEV Education Tracks DEV Challenges DEV Help Advertise on DEV DEV Showcase About Contact Free Postgres Database Software comparisons Forem Shop Code of Conduct Privacy Policy Terms of Use Built on Forem — the open source software that powers DEV and other inclusive communities. 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