February 2020 (version 1.43)

Update 1.43.1: The update addresses these issues.

Update 1.43.2: The update addresses these issues.

Downloads: Windows: User System | Mac | Linux: snap deb rpm tarball

Welcome to the February 2020 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:

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. And for the latest Visual Studio Code news, updates, and content, follow us on Twitter @code!

Workbench

Search Editors

After a few iterations stabilizing on Insiders, we are shipping Search Editors, which let you view workspace search results in a full-sized editor, complete with syntax highlighting and optional lines of surrounding context. This has been a highly requested feature for some time.

Below is a search for the word 'SearchEditor' with two lines of text before and after the match for context:

Theme: A Touch of Lilac, Font: Hasklig

In a Search Editor, results can be navigated to using Go to Definition actions, such as F12 to open the source location in the current editor group, or ⌘K F12 (Windows, Linux Ctrl+K F12) to open the location in an editor to the side. Additionally, double-clicking can optionally open the source location, configurable with the search.searchEditor.doubleClickBehaviour setting.

You can open a new Search Editor with the Search Editor: Open New Search Editor command, or using the Open New Search Editor button at the top of the Search view. Alternatively, you can copy your existing results from a Search view over to a Search Editor with the Open in Editor link added to the top of the results tree, or the Search Editor: Open Results in Editor command.

Note: You can try out the experimental Search Editor: Apply Changes extension to synchronize edits you make in a Search Editor back to source files:

Draggable sash corners

Did you know you could resize two orthogonal sashes simultaneously by grabbing and dragging the intersection between them? This already worked for editor sashes, and now it also works in the edges between editors and views:

Theme: GitHub Sharp, Font: Fira Code

Notarized macOS builds

Visual Studio Code for macOS is now notarized by Apple, so you should no longer get the following dialog:

Read the investigation issue and Apple's developer documentation for more details.

Progress notifications

Notifications that indicate a long running operation behave slightly differently starting with this release:

They do not provide a generic Close button anymore, as it gave the wrong impression about the operation being canceled or not. You can still press the Esc key to hide the notifications.

button anymore, as it gave the wrong impression about the operation being canceled or not. You can still press the key to hide the notifications. The notifications indicate the progress of their operation in the Status bar, whenever the notification is hidden while the operation is still ongoing.

The later change helps you know that an operation is continuing to run in the background (such as a long running save operation) after you have dismissed the notification.

Below the operation is still running until the Cancel button is selected:

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Untitled editors

A new setting workbench.editor.untitled.labelFormat lets you control whether untitled editors should use the file contents as the title or not. Possible values are content or name . Configure 'workbench.editor.untitled.labelFormat': 'name' for the previous behavior, where untitled editors would have a short title, such as Untitled-1.

When pasting text into an untitled editor, VS Code now automatically tries to detect the language mode from the first line of text. For example, pasting XML will set the XML mode automatically upon paste if the first line contains the typical XML header <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> .

VS Code supports opening files through protocol links (for example vscode://file/<file-path> ). In this milestone, we've expanded support to include opening folders or workspaces.

The syntax for folders or workspaces is the same as for files:

vscode://file/<path> vscode-insiders://file/<path>

Welcome views

Welcome views are a new addition to the workbench, which allows a view to create starting experiences for users to create content or configure VS Code, whenever there isn't any meaningful content to be displayed. Some views have already adopted this infrastructure, for example the File Explorer, which will offer to open a folder or clone a Git repository to get you started.

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Source Control Welcome view

Thanks to the new Welcome view infrastructure, the Source Control view now provides a better experience for certain situations, in which it would otherwise appear empty. For example, it can now guide users to open folders or clone repositories or to install Git, when no installation is detected.

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Editor

Minimap size

There is a new setting, editor.minimap.size , which controls how the minimap uses vertical space:

When set to proportional (the default), each line gets a certain amount of vertical space in the minimap, depending on editor.minimap.scale . For example, on a high-DPI monitor, with a configured scale of 1 (the default), each line gets 4 px in the minimap. So for a file of 100 lines, the height of the lines rendered in the minimap is 400 px, and for a file of 1000 lines, it is 4000 px. That means that for large files, the minimap will also scroll, as the current file is scrolled.

(the default), each line gets a certain amount of vertical space in the minimap, depending on . For example, on a high-DPI monitor, with a configured scale of (the default), each line gets 4 px in the minimap. So for a file of 100 lines, the height of the lines rendered in the minimap is 400 px, and for a file of 1000 lines, it is 4000 px. That means that for large files, the minimap will also scroll, as the current file is scrolled. When set to fit , the height of the minimap is limited to never be larger than the editor height. So if a file has many lines, they will be sampled and only a subset will be rendered in the minimap, such that there is no need for the minimap to scroll.

, the height of the minimap is limited to never be larger than the editor height. So if a file has many lines, they will be sampled and only a subset will be rendered in the minimap, such that there is no need for the minimap to scroll. When set to fill , the height of the minimap is always the editor height. For large files, this is also achieved by sampling lines, but for small files, this is achieved by reserving more vertical space for each line (stretching the lines).

Here the size is changed from proportional to fit , and then in a smaller file, from fit to fill :

Minimap background and slider colors

There are now new colors for customizing the minimap and its slider. One of the new colors is minimap.background and when the color is defined to be transparent (lowering the #RRGGBBAA Alpha channel), the minimap will be rendered transparently:

{ "workbench.colorCustomizations" : { "minimap.background" : "#00000055" } }

Column Selection mode

There is a new global toggle, accessible via the Selection > Column Selection Mode menu item. Once this mode is entered, as indicated in the Status bar, the mouse gestures and the arrow keys will create a column selection:

You can also disable Column Selection mode from the Status bar.

Render whitespace on selection

The default value of the editor.renderWhitespace setting has changed from none to selection . Whitespace characters will now be rendered on highlighted text by default.

Here the tab and space whitespace characters are displayed in the selected region:

There is now more control over the behavior of the Go to Definition mouse gesture. By default, Go to Definition via mouse opens a separate editor but with the new setting editor.definitionLinkOpensInPeek as true , the gesture will open in a Peek view.

Unfold anywhere on a folded line

There's a new setting Editor: Unfold On Click After End of Line ( editor.unfoldOnClickAfterEndOfLine ) that controls what happens when you click in the empty space to the right of a folded line (after the ... ). When set to true , you can click anywhere after the text on the folded line and not worry about exactly selecting the ellipses ( ... ). By default, this option is off.

Undo textual edits across multiple files

When undoing a rename or a Code Action that affects multiple files, VS Code will now allow you to undo the change in all the affected files.

A prompt will be presented when undoing a cross-file edit:

Note: File operations, like renaming a file, are not yet supported. For example, renaming a class name in Java (where the file name gets renamed as well) is not yet supported with cross-file undo.

Multiple rulers with different colors

The existing editor.rulers setting has been extended to allow defining rulers that have custom colors. In the following screenshot, there is a magenta ruler at column 80 and a red one at column 90:

{ "editor.rulers" : [ { "column" : 80 , "color" : "#ff00ff" }, { "column" : 90 , "color" : "#ff0000" } ] }

Editor top and bottom padding

It is now possible to reserve whitespace (number of pixels) at the top or bottom of the editor using editor.padding.top and editor.padding.bottom .

Here is the editor with a top padding of 50 pixels:

{ "editor.padding.top" : 50 }

Scrolling predominant axis

When trying to scroll vertically using a modern touchpad, it oftentimes happens that the file scrolls horizontally as well. There is now a new setting, editor.scrollPredominantAxis (which is set to true by default) which blocks "diagonal" scrolling. This forces scrolling gestures to be either vertical or horizontal (based on the highest absolute scroll delta), but never diagonal.

Shift+Insert on Linux

With 1.42, Shift+Insert was modified to paste from the selection clipboard. We received a lot of feedback that this was breaking existing muscle-memory and so we decided to roll back and have Shift+Insert paste from the regular clipboard, as before.

Accessibility

Linux screen reader support

With the help of the community, we have been working on making VS Code accessible on Linux with the Orca screen reader. Orca and Chromium are still actively working on screen reader support, so there are a couple of things needed in order to have this fully working:

Make sure to use the latest version of Orca out of master. Instructions can be found in issue #91063.

Make sure to have the setting "editor.accessibilitySupport": "on" in VS Code. You can do this using settings, or by running the Show Accessibility Help command and pressing Ctrl+E to turn on Screen Reader Optimized mode.

After enabling that setting, VS Code should work with the Orca screen reader.

Languages

TypeScript 3.8.3

VS Code now bundles TypeScript 3.8.3. This major update brings support for new language features including ECMAScript private fields, top-level await expressions, and the export * as ns syntax, along with many tooling features and improvements. The update also fixes a number of important bugs.

You can read more about TypeScript 3.8 on the TypeScript blog.

Convert to template string refactoring

You can use the new Convert to template string refactoring for JavaScript and TypeScript to quickly convert string concatenations to template strings:

Call hierarchy support for JavaScript and TypeScript

TypeScript 3.8 brings call hierarchy support in JavaScript and TypeScript.

IntelliSense now renders JS Doc @link inline tags for http and https links. In the example image below, notice how the @link for lightbulb menu is rendered in the hover:

@link to URLs work for both JavaScript and TypeScript and are rendered as clickable links in hovers, suggestion details, and signature help.

TypeScript semantic highlighting

Semantic highlighting is now on by default for TypeScript and JavaScript. Semantic highlighting is provided by the TypeScript language server and goes on top of the syntax highlighting based on TextMate grammars. The default syntax (TextMate) highlighter classifies many tokens as variables and these are now resolved into namespaces, classes, parameters, and so on.

Semantic highlighting is controlled by the following setting:

"editor.semanticHighlighting.enabled" : true

JSON schemas

When associating file names to schemas, you can now also use exclusion patterns. Exclusion patterns start with '!'. To match, at least one pattern needs to match and the last matching pattern must not be an exclusion pattern.

"json.schemas" : [ { "fileMatch" : [ "/receipts/*.json" , "!/receipts/*.excluded.json" ], "url" : "./receipts.schema.json" } ]

Debugging

"Run" more prominent in the UI

User studies revealed that new users have difficulties finding how to run their programs in VS Code. One reason is that the existing "Debugging" functionality is not something that they relate to "Running" a program. For that reason, we are making "Run" more prominent in the UI.

The main menu Debug has become the Run menu.

has become the menu. The Run and Debug view has become the Run view and the corresponding Activity Bar icon now shows a large "Play" icon with a small "bug" decoration.

Debug Console grouping

The VS Code Debug Console now supports output grouping. Debug extensions can indicate when Debug Console output should be grouped together under a common parent. For now, only the Mock Debug extension implements output grouping, but soon other debug extensions will follow - most notably the JavaScript debugger.

Disable Debug Console history suggestions

You can now turn off history suggestions in the Debug Console via the new debug.console.historySuggestions setting. By default, history suggestions are on.

Integrated Terminal

Unicode 11 support

The width of characters in the terminal now default to the Unicode 11 widths. What this means to most people is that emojis will be correctly showing up as wide characters.

Better Alt+Click to navigate prompt support

The terminal has a feature that lets you Alt+Click on a cell and the cursor will navigate to that cell. Historically when in a shell's prompt, this only worked on a single line, even if it was wrapped. This has been improved to work on a full wrapped line.

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Note that this may not work correctly on Windows yet but recent changes to ConPTY should improve this in the future.

Tasks

The task Quick Pick, shown when the Run Task command is executed, has been updated to show you which task providers are still running. If you don't need tasks from that provider, the Stop Detecting button will immediately show you the tasks that have been detected so far, so you don't have to wait for any slow task providers.

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Task instance limit

The tasks "runOptions" now includes an "instanceLimit" , which specifies the number of instances of a task that are permitted. The default "instanceLimit" is 1.

promptString password input

The "promptString" user input type can have "password": true , which will cause the dropdown input box to obscure the typed content like a password.

Preview features

Preview features are not ready for release but are functional enough to use. We welcome your early feedback while they are under development.

Settings Sync

We have been working the last couple of months to support synchronizing VS Code settings, extensions, and keyboard shortcuts across machines (popular feature request #2743). In this milestone, we are happy to announce that this feature is ready for preview from our next 1.44.0 Insider release. You can now have your preferences synchronized in all your VS Code installs across all your machines. You can also bootstrap VS Code with your personal preferences on a fresh machine with minimal effort.

The following video demonstrates applying extensions and settings locally on a new machine:

Currently Settings, Keyboard Shortcuts, Extensions, and the Display Language are synchronized but we are planning to add more. You can review our list of proposed Setting Sync features.

Machine settings (with machine or machine-overridable scopes) are not synchronized by default. You can also add or remove settings in this list from the Settings editor or using the setting sync.ignoredSettings .

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Keyboard Shortcuts are synchronized per platform by default. If your keyboard shortcuts are platform-agnostic, you can synchronize them across platforms by disabling the setting sync.keybindingsPerPlatform .

All built-in and installed extensions are synchronized along with their global enablement state. You can skip synchronizing an extension, either from the Extensions view or using the setting sync.ignoredExtensions .

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Settings Sync supports detecting conflicts in settings and keybindings while synchronizing. Conflicts are shown using the diff editor with incoming (remote) changes on the left side and local changes on the right side. You can resolve the conflicts by editing in the right side editor and merge the changes using the actions provided in the editor.

Here the remote colorTheme setting value is chosen with the Accept Remote action:

Themes: GitHub Sharp, GitHub Sharp Dark

Settings Sync activity can be monitored in the Log (Sync) output view. All local preferences are backed up for the last 30 days on disk whenever they are changed during synchronization. You can use the command Sync: Open Local Backups Folder to go the backups location and retrieve your old preferences.

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At any time, you can turn off synchronization, either on your current VS Code instance or on all your VS Code installs. When choosing to disable all synchronization, your data will be removed from the cloud.

Note: Settings Sync uses a Microsoft account to store your VS Code preferences for synchronization and therefore you need an account to use this feature. For more information, refer to the Settings Sync documentation.

Timeline view

In this iteration, we've continued making progress on our new Timeline view. It's now enabled by default on the Insiders edition, and can be enabled on Stable via the following setting:

"timeline.showView" : true

Below the Timeline view displays the Git commit history of a file:

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We've now added paging support (via the Load more action shown above), and added a relative timestamp over on the right. Extensions can also contribute menu items to the Timeline view as well as to individual timeline items. In the screenshot above, the built-in Git extension is contributing the commands, Copy Commit ID and Copy Commit Message.

New JavaScript debugger

This month we've continued making progress on our new JavaScript debugger. It's installed by default on Insiders, and can be installed from the Marketplace in VS Code Stable. You can start using it with your existing launch configurations by enabling the debug.javascript.usePreview setting. Here are some new features we added this month:

Pretty printing

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The debugger can now pretty print files, especially useful when dealing with minified sources. It will show a prompt when you step into or open a file that looks minified, and you can also trigger pretty printing manually via the Debug: Pretty print for debugging command.

You can turn off the suggestion prompt by selecting Never, or changing the setting debug.javascript.suggestPrettyPrinting to false .

Support for Microsoft Edge and WebView2

We now support launching the new Microsoft Edge browser, just change your debug type from chrome or pwa-chrome to pwa-msedge to try it out. It supports all the same configuration settings as chrome does.

With this comes support for the WebView2 control in desktop Windows applications. Check out our webview demo to learn how to set this up.

Remote Debugging

You can now debug browser source code from a remote workspace, such as GitHub Codespaces or Remote SSH, in the new debugger. To set this up, port forward your web server (or a use a simple static web server), and then create a chrome or pwa-msedge launch configuration that points to the forwarded port.

For example:

{ "version" : "0.2.0" , "configurations" : [ { "type" : "pwa-msedge" , "request" : "launch" , "name" : "Debug my App" , "url" : "http://localhost:5000" // <- debug an app forwarded on port 5000 } ] }

When you launch the debugging session, a browser will open on your machine and you can debug like you normally would from VS Code.

Last release, VS Code gave you just a taste of relocating views to the Panel. In this release, this experience has been expanded to many more views. You can now move views such as the Debug/Run view or the new Timeline view. You can also move views into other views in the Side Bar. For example, perhaps you'd like to move the Open Editors view into the Source Control view. You can do all of this by dragging the views and dropping them in the desired location in the Activity Bar or Panel.

The animation below highlights moving the Open Editors view to a different view and then to the Panel:

Theme: Horizon Bright, Font: Cascadia Code

We've also introduced a new command to make moving views easier with the keyboard: View: Move Focused View ( workbench.action.moveFocusedView ).

This is a preview feature, and so if you get into a state that you can't fix, there is a command to reset all views to their original locations: View: Reset View Locations ( workbench.action.resetViewLocations ).

Contributions to extensions

Remote Development

Work continues 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.

Feature highlights in 1.43 include:

Open remote workspaces via application links.

Remote - SSH: Support for Windows and macOS SSH hosts.

Remote - SSH: Connection sharing on by default.

Remote - WSL: Check out the recent Using Docker in WSL 2 blog post.

You can learn about new extension features and bug fixes in the Remote Development release notes.

Vetur

The Vetur extension for Vue.js now includes better auto completion for template interpolation. You can find the changelog in the 0.24.0 release.

Extension authoring

Debugger Extension API

Debug Welcome view

As described in the Welcome View Content API section, the debug view is now open for Welcome View Content contributions. These additions can be used to guide beginning users to specific features that simplify running or debugging programs.

In order for the view to not become cluttered by too many Welcome View Content contributions, we suggest that individual contributions are only enabled for the current active language. To facilitate this, we have introduced a new context key debugStartLanguage , which is set to the last active editor language for which a debugger was used.

For example, if your debugger targets Python, you would contribute Welcome View Content only if debugStartLanguage == "python" . In case your debugger targets multiple languages, you can use the OR operator ( || ) to combine multiple conditions.

New Debug Hover API

Today VS Code's debug hover uses a regular expression-based heuristic to find an expression under the mouse that the VS Code debugger evaluates and then shows the result in a hover. Since the regular expression is not configurable, not all languages are handled correctly (or they are not handled to the full extent possible). Issues #84044, #89603, and #89332 describe typical problems.

In this milestone, we've introduced new extension API to control the behavior of the debug hover.

An EvaluatableExpressionProvider can be registered for a language to provide an expression under the mouse that the VS Code debugger will evaluate against an active debug session.

Here is a simple example from the Mock debug sample that shows a (simple) implementation based on getWordRangeAtPosition API:

vscode . languages . registerEvaluatableExpressionProvider ( 'markdown' , { provideEvaluatableExpression ( document : vscode . TextDocument , position : vscode . Position ): vscode . ProviderResult < vscode . EvaluatableExpression > { const wordRange = document . getWordRangeAtPosition ( position ); if ( wordRange ) { return new vscode . EvaluatableExpression ( wordRange ); } return undefined ; // nothing evaluatable found under mouse } });

No longer escaping whitespace

The VS Code debugger UI no longer escapes or quotes any whitespace received from a debug extension or debug adapter. For example, all strings received in DAP Variables or as DAP Output events are shown in the UI as they are without modification.

This means that it is now up to the debug extension or debug adapter to decide if whitespace needs to be escaped before sending the data to VS Code. More details can be found in issue #73845.

CodeAction.disabled

With the CodeAction.disabled property, extension can now tell VS Code why a given CodeAction is not possible for the user's current selection. This is especially useful for refactorings.

Here's an example of using .disabled in our Code Action sample extension.

import * as vscode from 'vscode' ; export class Emojizer implements vscode . CodeActionProvider { public provideCodeActions ( document : vscode . TextDocument , range : vscode . Range ): vscode . CodeAction [] | undefined { const action = new vscode . CodeAction ( `Convert to ${ emoji } ` , vscode . CodeActionKind . Refactor . append ( 'emojize' ) ); if (! this . isAtStartOfSmiley ( document , range )) { // Tell the user why our action is not available action . disabled = { reason: 'Selection is not currently on a :)' }; return [ action ]; } action . edit = new vscode . WorkspaceEdit (); action . edit . replace ( document . uri , new vscode . Range ( range . start , range . start . translate ( 0 , 2 )), '😀' ); return action ; } }

If the user tries to apply a disabled Code Action through a keybinding, VS Code will display the .disabled error message to the user:

In addition, to help with discoverability, disabled Code Actions are shown as faded in the Refactor and Source Action context menus:

Note that disabled actions are not shown in the top-level lightbulb menu.

Terminal.exitStatus

Extensions can now determine whether terminals have exited and if they did, which exit code was used (if any).

window . onDidCloseTerminal ( t => { if ( t . exitStatus && t . exitStatus . code ) { vscode . window . showInformationMessage ( `Exit code: ${ t . exitStatus . code } ` ); } });

We have promoted the proposed diagnostic link API to Stable:

class Diagnostic { ... /** * A code or identifier for this diagnostic. * Should be used for later processing, e.g. when providing [code actions](#_CodeActionContext). */ code ?: string | number | { /** * A code or identifier for this diagnostic. * Should be used for later processing, e.g. when providing [code actions](#_CodeActionContext). */ value : string | number ; /** * A target URI to open with more information about the diagnostic error. */ target : Uri ; }; }

Workspace Edit Metadata

We have finalized the WorkspaceEditEntryMetadata API. It allows extension authors to classify the changes of a workspace edit, in particular if a change needs to be reviewed before being applied.

Debug Adapter Protocol

Support grouping in output events

An optional group attribute has been added to the output event in order to keep an output log organized by grouping related messages. Possible values for group are start and startCollapsed to open a group either expanded or collapsed, and end for closing a group.

Note: Starting with this release, VS Code supports this DAP enhancement.

Allow cursor placement via completion items

Optional selectionStart and selectionLength attributes have been added to the completion item. With these attributes, the client's current selection (or caret position) can be controlled after the completion text has been inserted.

Note: VS Code does not yet support this DAP enhancement. It is planned for the next release.

Proposal: Progress events

We made some progress on a proposal for adding progress events to the Debug Adapter Protocol. If you are interested, you can contribute to the discussion on this DAP feature request.

Language Server Protocol

Work started on version 3.16 of the Language Server Protocol.

Included in the new version is proposed support for:

Insert / Replace edits for completion items.

Structural codes on diagnostics (for example link support).

Tag support for symbol information and document symbols.

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 .

file of your extension: . 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.

Custom Editor API

We continued to work on the custom editor API proposal this iteration. Notable changes include:

Renaming API methods to be shorter and more consistent.

Simplifying creation of custom editors for text files by introducing CustomTextEditorProvider . This custom editor uses VS Code's normal TextDocument as its data model, so that you don't have to implement save , backup , and other operations yourself. This also makes it easy to have live synchronization between a custom editor for a resource and a text editor for the same resource.

. This custom editor uses VS Code's normal as its data model, so that you don't have to implement , , and other operations yourself. This also makes it easy to have live synchronization between a custom editor for a resource and a text editor for the same resource. Introduction of CustomDocument to store the model that a binary CustomEditor works with. There is one CustomDocument per resource, but a user may open multiple custom editors on that resource.

Please continue to test and share feedback on our custom editor API proposal. Although the specifics of the API may still change, we believe the current proposal reflects what we are hoping to finalize soon.

CodeActionProviderMetadata.documentation

We've revised our previous proposal about standardizing how extensions contribute documentation for their Code Actions. With the updated proposal, documentation is now provided using a documentation property on the CodeActionProviderMetadata type.

For example, here's how our built-in JavaScript and TypeScript extension contributes documentation:

class TypeScriptRefactorProvider implements vscode . CodeActionProvider { public static readonly metadata : vscode . CodeActionProviderMetadata = { providedCodeActionKinds: [ vscode . CodeActionKind . Refactor ], documentation: [ { kind: vscode . CodeActionKind . Refactor , // This command opens a webpage when executed command: { command: LearnMoreAboutRefactoringsCommand . id , title: localize ( 'refactor.documentation.title' , "Learn more about JS/TS refactorings" ) } } ] }; ... }

The documentation is rendered after the main Code Action list, whenever the user requests refactorings:

Issue #86788 tracks the status of the proposal.

Welcome View Content API

Certain views now support Welcome content contributed from extensions. Refer to the original issue for more information.

The views that have adopted this API are:

explorer - File Explorer

- File Explorer scm - Source Control

- Source Control debug - Run/Debug

As an example, here's a Welcome view content contribution from the Git extension to clone a repository, on the explorer Welcome view:

Theme: GitHub Sharp

OpenDialogOptions and SaveDialogOptions title

The OpenDialogOptions and SaveDialogOptions both have a proposed title property. Whether the title is shown is platform-dependent, but if the platform does show the title , it is shown above the Save or Open dialog. For example, the built-in command Workspaces: Save Workspace As... sets the title to Save Workspace.

Engineering

In this milestone, we finished the exploration to bundle Electron 7 into VS Code. This is a major Electron release and comes with Chromium 78.0.3904.130 and Node.js 12.8.1.

For HDR displays

We are tracking an issue from Windows users with high dynamic range (HDR) displays in issue #88491, where VS Code looks dull and unusable. This is an issue with all Chromium-based applications on 78.0.3904.130 and the issue is fixed in more recent versions of Chromium 81. VS Code will get this fix once we upgrade to Electron 9 and there are technical reasons why the fix couldn't be backported to Chromium 78.

In the meantime, we have a temporary workaround for this issue:

Open the Command Palette ( ⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P ) ).

). Run the Preferences: Configure Runtime Arguments command.

command. This command will open a argv.json file to configure runtime arguments. There might be some default arguments there already.

file to configure runtime arguments. There might be some default arguments there already. Edit "disable-color-correct-rendering": true to "disable-color-correct-rendering": false .

to . Restart VS Code.

Note: Do not edit this setting unless you are experiencing issues!

We added this default runtime argument so that we can override Chromium's default color correction to sRGB and instead use the display color space on macOS. Doing this avoids problems like issue #84154 but doesn't work for HDR displays.

"strict": true

When we first released VS Code, TypeScript was still a new and rapidly evolving language that was missing some of the useful type safety checks that you probably take for granted today, such as strict null checking. Over the past few years, the TypeScript team has introduced a number of options that make the TypeScript compiler more "strict". These strict options can catch many common programming mistakes and eliminate entire classes of errors. The benefits of strict mode are well documented, and we've long wanted to enable strict mode for the VS Code codebase. However doing so seemed like an almost impossible task, given that it would require fixing thousands of errors in the roughly half a million lines of source code that make up the core VS Code codebase.

Still, the value of strict mode was great enough that we decided it was worth working towards, even if it would take us some time to get there. So over the past two years, we've been incrementally updating our code base to be strict mode compliant. We did all this work incrementally and directly in our development branch so that every strict mode related fix made our codebase a little bit safer for everyone. Enabling strict null checks was probably the most complicated part of the process, and we documented how we accomplished this in a blog post.

This iteration, we finally finished enabling the last strict mode option: strictFunctionTypes . With this done, a rather anticlimactic commit enabled strict mode for our entire codebase!

Enabling strict mode was a long journey that everyone on the core VS Code team and many community members contributed to. However, by doing this work incrementally, we were able to benefit from all this hard work starting on day one. Going forward, strict mode should encourage coding best practices, make refactoring safer, and ultimately let us ship faster and with fewer bugs!

Improved CI build performance

VS Code uses Azure Pipelines for its continuous integration builds and we recently improved the build performance considerably. You can learn more about this in the Improving CI Build Times blog post.

Running tests against browsers

In this milestone, we enabled all of our tests (unit, integration, smoke) to run in browsers by leveraging the Playwright library, which gives us increased coverage on browsers such as Chrome, Firefox, and Safari. You can refer to our VS Code Tests README for how to run these tests.

Notable fixes

61491: SCM: Viewlet should improve "no repositories" messaging

74782: Investigate: macOS notarization

82828: autoReveal highlight filename where it is without always moving it to the middle in explorer

8641: macOS: Allow mouse buttons 4 and 5 to navigate history

87767: VSCode restart debugging not working anymore

88038: Do not pollute shell history with automatically executed debugger commands

89230: "Group" is read when editor is focused

89699: Go Back/Go Forward: preserve selections

89989: Web: allow to open a file into a new window

90075: Explorer: Support dangling symbolic links

90240: Line numbers invisible after Zen Mode toggled off

90876: List items should have role 'listitem'

91166: Alerts are too verbose when problems panel is open.

91238: Chords not working in integrated terminal

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:

Contributions to vscode :

Contributions to vscode-eslint :

Contributions to language-server-protocol :

Contributions to vscode-js-debug :

SantoJambit (@SantoJambit): Only get root level scripts property for codelens PR #351

Contributions to vscode-languageserver-node :

Contributions to vscode-css-languageservice :

Contributions to vscode-vsce :

Robert Holt (@rjmholt): Add --noGitHubIssueLinking to stop issue link expansion in package step PR #424

Contributions to localization :

There are over 800 Cloud + AI Localization community members using the Microsoft Localization Community Platform (MLCP), with over about 170 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.