DEV Community

Michael Hoffmann
Michael Hoffmann

Posted on

How I Increased My Productivity With Visual Studio Code

In this post I will describe how I increased my productivity by learning how to use Visual Studio Code in a more efficient way.

But in general, always consider this advice as it is really important:

Learn your IDE/Editor so that you are able to use it in the most efficient way

Why Is This Important

Looking back at me as a programmer in the beginning of my professional software developer career I would definitely give myself the same advice mentioned above. In my first days as a developer I did most of my code interactions with the mouse and did not optimize my IDE or text editor.

Today I think I can navigate more efficient through my code and therefore have more time for more important stuff.

My Productivity Tips

Learn The Most Important Keyboard Shortcuts

In my opinion, this is the most important step you can take as a developer. Take the time and learn the most often used shortcuts you need throughout the day.

Here some of my most used OS X shortcuts:

If you are a Windows or Linux user, please check the appropriate shortcuts: Windows Shortcuts,
Linux Shortcuts.

  • CMD + P: Opens the command palette and you can search for any file. Example: Enter cdcts to search for customer-details.component.ts which is in my opinion the fastest way to jump to a certain file. You should definitely change to this approach instead of navigating in the Explorer by mouse. Quick Open
  • CMD + D: Finds and selects the next match for the currently selected word. Multicursor word
  • CMD + arrow down/up: Move cursor to end/beginning of the current file
  • CMD + arrow right/left: Move cursor to end/beginning of current line
  • Option + arrow right/left: Move cursor by word
  • Option + Shift + arrow right/left: Make selection by word
  • Option + arrow up/down: Move current line up or down
  • Option + Shift + arrow up/down: Duplicate current line one line above or below
  • CMD + Shift + K: Delete current line
  • CMD + B: Toggle Sidebar visibility
  • CMD + Shift + F: Search across files
  • CMD + .: Provides quick fixes. For example, I use this mostly to automatically rearrange my imports by the given linting rules.
  • CMD + Option + arrow left/right:
  • Multi-cursor: Multi-cursor are very helpful to edit code on multiple lines. Multi-cursor

See Basic Editing for further basic shortcuts and details.

Command Palette

With CMD + Shift + P you can open the Command Palette which is a powerful tool in Visual Studio Code.

Just start typing any command you want to execute and you will find it (if it is available). Additionally, you can see the corresponding shortcut next to the command. This is also an elegant way to start learning the keyboard shortcuts for your most used commands.

Command Palette

Emmet

I must admit, I was blown away as I recognized that Emmet is supported by VS Code by default and how powerful it is. Emmet is a markup expansion tool that makes writing HTML much easier. It is easy to learn and has a simple syntax. Checkout the Emmet Cheat Sheet to learn more about the Emmet syntax.

And here you can see Emmet in action:

Use Workspaces

One thing I started to use recently are multi-root workspaces in VS Code. They can be very helpful when you are working on several related projects at one time. For example, I have created a workspace for all of my private projects.

Using workspaces I do not have to handle multiple VS Code editor windows but always work with one window which includes my current workspace.

Use Plugins

Subsequent are some of my most used VS Code plugins:

What I did not mention here are all the framework specific plugins. So of course, I recommend to install available plugins for your framework/technology/programming language you are using. They can also save you a ton of time.

Conclusion

These are just some productivity tips which I can give you. Of course, VS Code provides many more features which can assist you in all kind of matter (see links below). For example, VS Code releases each month a major update with many new features and improvements. Read the release notes of these releases as they often contain new features which further can increase your productivity.

And please take the time to learn your IDE/editor (if you haven't done it yet). This will definitely make you a better programmer.

Links

Top comments (6)

Collapse
 
kepta profile image
Kushan Joshi

I find the following Mac shortcuts pretty helpful

ctrl-a jump to start of line.
ctrl-e jump to end of line.

The good thing about these shortcuts is that they are universal, which means you can use them in any text field, be it chrome, VSCode, safari, finder etc.

Collapse
 
icatalina profile image
Ignacio Catalina
  { "key": "ctrl+a",              "command": "cursorHome",
    "when": "editorTextFocus"
  },
  {
    "key": "ctrl+a",
    "command": "-cursorLineStart",
    "when": "editorTextFocus"
  },

Best thing since slice bread.

Instead of putting the cursor at the beginning of the line, it goes to the first character with content.

Collapse
 
matt123miller profile image
Matt Miller

Huh, TIL. I always use cmd + left arrow for beginning of line cmd + right arrow for end of line in MacOS.

Collapse
 
kepta profile image
Kushan Joshi • Edited

Ya I used to use that, but it didn't work universally (eg. terminal, iTunes etc) for me. But the ctrl-a/e really works universally.

Collapse
 
pranay_rauthu profile image
pranay rauthu

check this site. It helps in creating your own snippets.

Collapse
 
danroc profile image
Daniel da Rocha

I'm all for keyboard shortcuts... thanks for sharing!!