- Visual Studio Code Live Server Default Browser
- Visual Studio Code Default Browser Windows 7
- Visual Studio Code Default Browser
The easiest way to be able to launch your code in a browser is to install the Open in Browser extension from the marketplace. After it is installed and VS Code is reloaded, you can go to your code and press ALT + B to launch your application in your default browser or ALT + SHIFT + B.
What's new?
- rewrite the code with TypeScript, now it dependes on a tiny library npm/opn
- support more browsers: Chromium(Mac only), Firefox Developer Edition(Mac only), Edge(Windows only, sometimes it won't work)
- you can open any type of file with the default program, not only html file.
How it works?
- on win32 uses
start
- on darwin uses
open
- otherwise uses ths
xdg-open
script from freedesktop.org
Usage
use Alt + B
shortcut to open current html file in default browser, or Shift + Alt + B
to choose a browser.you could also right click just like the picture:
Welcome to the January 2021 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: Wrap tabs - Wrap editor tabs in the workbench instead of having a scrollbar. Configure tab decorations - Add editor tab status decorations. The end user will need to change the default browser or application for type.html files. Browse other questions tagged browser visual-studio-code or ask your own question. The Overflow Blog Podcast 331: One in four visitors to Stack Overflow copies code. Welcome to the July 2017 release of Visual Studio Code. There are a number of significant updates in this version that we hope you will like, some of the key highlights include: Large file support - Improved performance for large files, no size limit on 64-bit machines.
when you choose oepn in Other Browsers
, a browser list will display, and you could choose one to open current file.
when you choose open in Default Browser
, it means system default browser by default. If you want to configure the default browser, you could override it like that:if you configured the default browser, when you choose open in Default Browser
, your configured browser will works.
you do not need to set opn-in-browser.default
a very accurate value, as long as the value matches any of the following terms, I will handle it:Chrome values: chrome, google chrome, google-chrome, gcFirefox values: firefox, mozilla firefox, ffIE values: ie, iexploreSafari values: safariOpera values: operaChromium values: chromiumFirefox Developer Edition values: firefox developer, fde, firefox developer editionEdge values: edge, msedge, microsoftedge
Shortcuts
key | command |
---|---|
Alt + B | open in default browser |
Shift + Alt + B | open in specified browser |
Changelog
see changelog for more infomation
License
Angular is a popular JavaScript library developed by Google for building web application user interfaces. The Visual Studio Code editor supports Angular IntelliSense and code navigation out of the box.
Welcome to Angular
We'll be using the Angular CLI for this tutorial. To install and use the command line interface as well as run the Angular application server, you'll need the Node.js JavaScript runtime and npm (the Node.js package manager) installed. npm is included with Node.js which you can install from Node.js downloads.
Tip: To test that you have Node.js and npm correctly installed on your machine, you can type node --version
and npm --version
.
Create bootable macos from windows. To install the Angular CLI, in a terminal or command prompt type:
This may take a few minutes to install. You can now create a new Angular application by typing:
my-app
is the name of the folder for your application. This may take a few minutes to create the Angular application in TypeScript and install its dependencies.
Upgrade from mountain lion to high sierra. Let's quickly run our Angular application by navigating to the new folder and typing ng serve
to start the web server and open the application in a browser:
You should see 'Welcome to app!!' on http://localhost:4200 in your browser. We'll leave the web server running while we look at the application with VS Code.
To open your Angular application in VS Code, open another terminal (or command prompt) and navigate to the my-app
folder and type code .
:
Syntax highlighting and bracket matching
Now expand the srcapp
folder and select the app.component.ts
file. You'll notice that VS Code has syntax highlighting for the various source code elements and, if you put the cursor on a parenthesis, the matching bracket is also selected.
IntelliSense
As you hover your mouse over text in the file, you'll see that VS Code gives you information about key items in your source code. Items such as variables, classes and Angular decorators are a few examples where you'll be presented with this information.
As you start typing in app.component.ts
, you'll see smart suggestions and code snippets.
You can click the information button (i
) to see a flyout with more documentation.
VS Code uses the TypeScript language service for code intelligence (IntelliSense) and it has a feature called Automatic Type Acquisition (ATA). ATA pulls down the npm Type Declaration files (*.d.ts
) for the npm modules referenced in the package.json
.
Go to Definition, Peek definition
Through the TypeScript language service, VS Code can also provide type definition information in the editor through Go to Definition (F12) or Peek Definition (⌥F12 (Windows Alt+F12, Linux Ctrl+Shift+F10)). Open the app.module.ts
file and put the cursor over AppComponent
in the bootstrap
property declaration, right click and select Peek Definition. A Peek window will open showing the AppComponent
definition from app.component.ts
.
Press Escape to close the Peek window.
Hello World!
Let's update the sample application to 'Hello World'. Go back to the app.component.ts
file and change the title
string in AppComponent
to 'Hello World'.
Once you save the app.component.ts
file, the running instance of the server will update the web page and you'll see 'Welcome to Hello World!!'.
Tip: VS Code supports Auto Save, which by default saves your files after a delay. Check the Auto Save option in the File menu to turn on Auto Save or directly configure the files.autoSave
user setting.
Debugging Angular
To debug the client side Angular code, we'll need to install the Debugger for Chrome extension.
Note: This tutorial assumes you have the Chrome browser installed. There are also debugger extensions for the Edge and Firefox browsers.
Open the Extensions view (⇧⌘X (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+X)) and type 'chrome' in the search box. You'll see several extensions which reference Chrome.
Press the Install button for Debugger for Chrome.
Set a breakpoint
To set a breakpoint in app.component.ts
, click on the gutter to the left of the line numbers. This will set a breakpoint which will be visible as a red circle.
Configure the Chrome debugger
We need to initially configure the debugger. To do so, go to the Run view (⇧⌘D (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+D)) and click on the gear button to create a launch.json
debugger configuration file. Choose Chrome from the Select Environment dropdown list. This will create a launch.json
file in a new .vscode
folder in your project which includes a configuration to launch the website.
We need to make one change for our example: change the port of the url
from 8080
to 4200
. Your launch.json
should look like this:
Press F5 or the green arrow to launch the debugger and open a new browser instance. The source code where the breakpoint is set runs on startup before the debugger was attached so we won't hit the breakpoint until we refresh the web page. Refresh the page and you should hit your breakpoint.
You can step through your source code (F10), inspect variables such as AppComponent
, and see the call stack of the client side Angular application.
The Debugger for Chrome extension README has lots of information on other configurations, working with sourcemaps, and troubleshooting. You can review it directly within VS Code from the Extensions view by clicking on the extension item and opening the Details view.
Popular Starter Kits
In this tutorial, we used the Angular CLI to create a simple Angular application. There are lots of great samples and starter kits available to help build your first Angular application.
Recipes
The VS Code team has created recipes for more complex debugging scenarios. There you'll find the Chrome Debugging with Angular CLI recipe which also uses the Angular CLI and goes into detail on debugging the generated project's unit tests.
MEAN Starter
If you'd like to see a full MEAN (MongoDB, Express, Angular, Node.js) stack example, look at MEAN.JS. They have documentation and an application generator for a sample MEAN project. You'll need to install and start MongoDB, but you'll quickly have a MEAN application running. VS Code also has great MongoDB support through the Azure Databases extension.
React
React is another popular web framework. If you'd like to see an example of React working with VS Code, check out the Using React in VS Code tutorial. It will walk you through creating an React application and configuring the launch.json
file for the Debugger for Chrome extension.
Angular Extensions
In addition to the functionality, VS Code provides out of the box, you can install VS Code extensions for greater functionality.
Visual Studio Code Live Server Default Browser
Click on an extension tile above to read the description and reviews on the Marketplace.
To find other Angular extensions, open the Extensions view (⇧⌘X (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+X)) and type 'angular' to see a filtered list of Angular extensions.
Visual Studio Code Default Browser Windows 7
The community has also created 'Extension Packs' which bundle useful extensions together (for example, a linter, debugger, and snippets) into a single download. To see available Angular extension packs, add the 'extension packs' category to your filter (angular @category:'extension packs').