Now that I have these really handy one-click icons for opening my projects, I thought, “ How cool would it be if it kicked off the commands to start the project too!” Apparently, that’s what Tasks are for, and it wasn’t too hard to set up (thanks, Andrew!). Launch terminal commands when opening a project Workspace files have special little icons like this: They are actually quite useful as files, because I can put the files in my Dock and one-click open my Workspace just how I like it. code-workspace files into a local folder. (I’d avoid the repo itself, just because I don’t want to force my system on anyone else.) It’ll make a file, I thought, and I don’t really have a place for files like that. I knew what it meant, but I was too lazy to deal with it. In the Tizen Web search result that appears, click Install. In the EXTENSIONS view that appears, click the search box at the top and type Tizen Web. When you do that for the first time and then close the VS Code window, it will ask you if you want to save a “Workspace.” Meh, maybe later, I always thought. To install VS Code Extension for Tizen Web from the Visual Studio Code Marketplace, follow these steps: In the Activity Bar of VS Code, click Extensions. Now I can search across both projects and basically just pretend like it’s one big project. This means I don’t need to deal with my symlinks anymore. We kind of have a “duo repo” thing going on at CodePen (one is the main Ruby on Rails app, and one is our microservices), and now I can open them both together: Multiple folders open at once. Today I picked my top 10 super awesome shortcuts. I always assumed when you had a project open, it was one top level root folder and that’s it, if you needed another folder elsewhere open, you would open that in another window. I had a project folder open in VS Code like I always do, and I added another different root folder to the window. While the cursor is placed on a word, you can press the keys of this shortcut and the. I did a little thing the other day that I didn’t know was possible until then. This keyboard shortcut allows you to do the same as the previous one, but without having anything selected.
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