It lets me jump 10 lines at a time with the cursor if I hold CTRL and use my cursor keys (which I mentioned above I mapped to I/J/K/L). With only 544 installs (March 19 2018) this is my most obscure extension. The Visual Studio Marketplace offers an amazing amount of extensions, from snippet collections to formatters, language packs, themes, debuggers and more. Later on I realized this I/J/K/L setup is implemented in many 60% keyboards (like the Vortex Pok3r), where you basically use the function key in combination with these characters to as arrow keys. This whole concept of navigating with combinations of CTRL, ALT and I/J/K/L might seem very cumbersome and weird at the beginning, but I got comfortable with it quickly and I've never looked back. You can find it by opening the command palette with CMD/CTRL + SHIFT + P and selecting > Preferences: Open Keyboard Shortcuts (JSON).
#IN VISUAL STUDIO SHORTCUTS CODE#
Visual Studio Code will now let you manipulate keyboard shortcuts in a graphical user interface, but you can also specify each combination in the keybindings.json file. I (almost) never use caps lock, but use CTRL all the time, and the positioning of the Caps Lock-key makes it easier to reach than the CTRL-key. In addition, I mapped the Caps Lock key to CTRL using AutoHotkey. You can find a keybindings.json-gist for it here.
#IN VISUAL STUDIO SHORTCUTS FREE#
Keybindingsįeel free to call me lazy, but I got tired of moving my hands over to the mouse to navigate in the editor–and eventually the arrow keys started feeling far, far away from the main letters on the keyboard. These are my main productivity takeaways after using it for JavaScript programming for 3+ years. Visual Studio Code, the biggest open source project on GitHub, is my go-to editor and is used by all developers at SalesScreen. At SalesScreen we write a lot of JavaScript, and I have spent quite a bit of time experimenting with editors, keybindings, snippets and extensions to improve productivity and code quality.