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To see what languages are supported, click hereGit Extensions is a graphical user interface for Git that allows you to control Git without using the command line You may want to check out more software, such as Git LFS, OLAP PivotTable Extensions or Microsoft Visual Studio Tools for Git, which might be similar to Git Extensions. One place for all extensions for Visual Studio, Azure DevOps Services, Azure DevOps Server and Visual Studio Code. Discover and install extensions and subscriptions to create the dev environment you need. To clarify: The GitHub extension (which is a.vsix file) does NOT work on Visual Studio for Mac, as far as I can determine (tested on Community edition). So follow the tutorial in that Mac link, w/o trying to download that GitHub extension first:) – ToolmakerSteve Apr 25 at 18:41.
Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author. Git Extensions is a toolkit aimed at making working with Git on Windows more intuitive. Git Extensions is also available on Linux and Mac OS X using Mono. The shell extension will integrate in Windows Explorer and presents a context menu on files and directories.
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Active2 months ago
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I've just been through the VS Code installation process twice. The initial install is quick and painless (as is the editor itself), but I have had to remember the list of extensions I installed and am installing new ones a great rate.
With Sublime Text, I'd just copy a settings file to another PC and could auto-install any workflow dependencies that way, but what is the approach with VS Code?
Can I just back up a JSON 'settings' file or similar so that I can easily re-create my working environment (complete with extensions)?
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3 Answers
I've submitted an answer for this on the main StackOverflow site - pasted below for context
I've need to do this myself a few times - especially when installing on another machine.
Depending on your platform, your extensions folder is located on one of the following paths:
- Windows:
%USERPROFILE%.vscodeextensions
- Mac:
~/.vscode/extensions
- Linux:
~/.vscode/extensions
VS Code looks for extensions under your extensions folder .vscode/extensions. Depending on your platform it is located:Windows %USERPROFILE%.vscodeextensionsMac ~/.vscode/extensionsLinux ~/.vscode/extensionsThat should show you a list of the extensions
I've also had success using Visual Studio Code Settings Sync Extension to sync settings to GitHub gist
EDIT: In the lastest release of VSCode (May 2016) it is now possible to list the installed extension in the command line
Visual Studio
MarkPMarkP
This extension should do the trick, though the UX is so-so.
It syncs your settings to a Github Gist in JSON format. You'll have to create a Github token. I suggest saving the token code in the token file name, as when you need to download your settings again later, it's unlikely you'll have the code handy (at least, that was my case).
BrandonBrandon62622 gold badges77 silver badges1111 bronze badges
So as treehead's edit or MarkP's answer showed you can now list all extensions installed so the way to install that list of extensions would be to: Visual studio community 2017 for mac.
Transfer the newly created file to the machine that you want to install those extensions to. On that machine you would:
Which will then go through each extension in that file and install the extension.
If you want a clean install (AKA remove all existing extensions on that machine) you could run this before you install the new extensions (otherwise you will remove those new extensions too). BE CAREFUL as this will remove all extensions in VS Code: Does fl studio work for mac.
NickTheSickNickTheSick