How to move position of command visual studio extensions
It also adds four additional comment classifications, each classification with its own customizable foreground.
#HOW TO MOVE POSITION OF COMMAND VISUAL STUDIO EXTENSIONS CODE#
Open in Visual Studio Code is for those times where you have a project open in Visual Studio and you want to be able to quickly open it in Visual Studio Code.īetter Comments is a Visual Studio extension that gives you the ability to customize the font and opacity of your comments independently of the editor's font settings. It is also helpful for presentations where you want to display to the audience what keyboard shortcuts you are using. Displays the keyboard shortcut for any command that you execute to help you learn the shortcuts you need the most. Learn the Shortcut shows how easy you can make the same action using only the keyboard.
It is based largely on the spell checker extension originally created by Noah Richards, Roman Golovin, and Michael Lehenbauer. Visual Studio Spell Checker is a Visual Studio editor extension that checks the spelling of comments, strings, and plain text as you type or interactively with a tool window. For now, it supports coloring for build/build order output: Output Enhancer is an extension that adds styling to the Visual Studio output window. Rules map to classifications which in turn map to colors. The rules consist of regular expressions. VSColorOutput can change the color of a line emitted to the output window based on specified rules.
"dotjoshjohnson.xml", # XML Language Support "gordonwalkedby.vbnet", # VB.NET Language Support "luggage66.vbscript", # VBScript Language Support
"ms-python.python", # Python Language Support "ms-vscode.powershell", # PowerShell Language Support "dbankier.vscode-instant-markdown", # Markdown Language Support "ms-dotnettools.csharp", # C# Language Support
The PowerShell script provided by didn't worked for me, it throws an exception related that "Code" is not a cmdlet, so I'll share an alternative that worked for me: $vsCodeExec = ($Env:PROGRAMFILES) + "\Visual Studio Code\Bin\code.cmd"