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Microsoft Visual Studio Code (VSCode) is a popular cross-platform, general-purpose, open source IDE. Thanks to its powerful extensions ecosystem it supports many languages as well as deep customization options for themes, fonts, keyboard controls, and more.
Moved to https://develop.kde.org/docs/getting-started/building/ide/visual-studio-code/
 
==Installing==
 
VSCode is available as a deb, rpm, portable, and in the Arch User Repository.
 
https://code.visualstudio.com/Download
 
==Extensions==
 
Once VSCode is installed we need some extensions to enable support for the languages to work on KDE projects.
 
# [https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-vscode.cpptools-extension-pack C/C++ Extension Pack] - Enables support for C++ and CMake.
 
# [https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=tonka3000.qtvsctools Qt tools] - Enables some Qt support.
 
# [https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=bbenoist.QML QML] - Enables syntax highlighting for QML.
 
Optional:
 
[https://zealdocs.org/ Zeal] is an application that allows browsing documentation offline.
 
[https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=deerawan.vscode-dash Dash] is a VSCode extension that enables a hotkey (Ctrl + H) to instantly open the item under the cursor in Zeal.
 
These paired together make looking up documentation while working on code very quick and easy.
 
==kdesrc-build configuration==
 
Needed to enable [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_Server_Protocol Language Server Protocol] support:
 
In <code>~/.config/kdesrc-buildrc</code> ensure these two options are in the global section and set to true:
 
{{Input|1=<nowiki>
    compile-commands-linking true
    compile-commands-export true
</nowiki>}}
 
Other recommended settings:
 
{{Input|1=<nowiki>
global
...
    cmake-options -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug
    directory-layout invent
...
end global
</nowiki>}}
 
==Configuration==
 
We will use kcalc (the KDE calculator app) as an example.
Build kcalc:
 
{{Input|1=<nowiki>
kdesrc-build kcalc
</nowiki>}}
 
Either open VSCode, from the VSCode main menu > File > Open Folder... [Ctrl+K Ctrl+O] > select <code>~/kde/src/utilities/kcalc/</code>.
 
Or, in a terminal,
 
{{Input|1=<nowiki>
cd ~/kde/src/utilities/kcalc
code .
</nowiki>}}
 
The directory opened in VSCode is also known as the VSCode workspace folder.
 
VSCode has two sets of settings: "User" settings (e.g. ~/.config/Code/User/settings.json) and "Workspace" settings (e.g. ~/kde/src/utilities/kcalc/.vscode/settings.json). You can see these in VSCode main menu > File > Preferences > Settings Ctrl+Comma > at the top there are two tabs: "User" and "Workspace"
 
VSCode stores settings related to a specific project in the top-level directory of that project, in a hidden directory named <code>.vscode</code>.
 
===~/kde/src/utilities/kcalc/.vscode/settings.json===
 
Create this file. Make it have the content:
 
{{Input|1=<nowiki>
{
    "cmake.buildDirectory": "${workspaceFolder}/../../build/dolphin"
}
</nowiki>}}
 
===~/kde/src/utilities/kcalc/.vscode/c_cpp_properties.json===
 
This config enables the correct settings to support C++, CMake & IntelliSense.
 
Create this file. Make it have the content:
 
{{Input|1=<nowiki>
{
    "configurations": [
        {
            "name": "Linux",
            "includePath": [
                "${workspaceFolder}/**"
            ],
            "defines": [],
            "compilerPath": "/usr/bin/gcc",
            "cStandard": "c17",
            "cppStandard": "c++17",
            "intelliSenseMode": "${default}",
            "compileCommands": "${workspaceFolder}/compile_commands.json"
        }
    ],
    "version": 4
}
</nowiki>}}
 
===User settings===
 
These settings apply once to every project.
 
In VSCode open the command palette with Ctrl + Shift + P > "Preferences: Open User Settings (JSON)". On my machine the file has the content:
 
{{Input|1=<nowiki>
{
    "editor.wordWrap": "on",
    "cmake.environment": {
      "PATH": "~/kde/usr/bin:${env:PATH}",
      "LD_LIBRARY_PATH": "~/kde/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu:${env:LD_LIBRARY_PATH}",
      "XDG_DATA_DIRS": "~/kde/usr/share:${env:XDG_DATA_DIRS}",
      "XDG_CONFIG_DIRS": "~/kde/usr/etc/xdg:${env:XDG_CONFIG_DIRS}",
      "QT_PLUGIN_PATH": "~/kde/usr/lib/plugins:${env:QT_PLUGIN_PATH}",
      "QML2_IMPORT_PATH": "~/kde/usr/lib/qml:${env:QML2_IMPORT_PATH}",
      "QT_QUICK_CONTROLS_STYLE_PATH": "~/kde/usr/lib/qml/QtQuick/Controls.2/:${env:QT_QUICK_CONTROLS_STYLE_PATH}",
    },
    "cmake.generator": "Unix Makefiles",
    "cmake.installPrefix": "~/kde/usr",
}
</nowiki>}}
 
Or, alternatively, from VSCode main menu > File > Preferences > Settings Ctrl+Comma > User > Extensions > CMake Tools > scroll through the list and make sure that you keep the defaults, plus you configure the following:
 
{{Input|1=<nowiki>
"cmake.environment": {
  "PATH": "~/kde/usr/bin:${env:PATH}",
  "LD_LIBRARY_PATH": "~/kde/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu:${env:LD_LIBRARY_PATH}",
  "XDG_DATA_DIRS": "~/kde/usr/share:${env:XDG_DATA_DIRS}",
  "XDG_CONFIG_DIRS": "~/kde/usr/etc/xdg:${env:XDG_CONFIG_DIRS}",
  "QT_PLUGIN_PATH": "~/kde/usr/lib/plugins:${env:QT_PLUGIN_PATH}",
  "QML2_IMPORT_PATH": "~/kde/usr/lib/qml:${env:QML2_IMPORT_PATH}",
  "QT_QUICK_CONTROLS_STYLE_PATH": "~/kde/usr/lib/qml/QtQuick/Controls.2/:${env:QT_QUICK_CONTROLS_STYLE_PATH}"
}
 
"cmake.generator": "Unix Makefiles"
 
"cmake.installPrefix": "~/kde/usr"
</nowiki>}}
 
E.g. scroll to "Cmake: Environment Environment variables to set when running CMake commands." > Add Item > Key: <code>PATH</code> , Value: <code>~/kde/usr/bin:${env:PATH}</code>. Then, while you hover with the mouse over this settings, or wile you edit this setting, on the left hand side of "Cmake: Environment" a "gear" icon will appear > click on it > Copy Settings as JSON > make sure that the contents of the clipboard is equal to the JSON snippet from above, for "cmake.environment".
 
After you finish configuring VSCode, close all VSCode windows.
 
==Working on a project==
 
We work on a project in VSCode by opening it as a folder:
 
* <code>File</code> -> <code>Open Folder</code>
* Navigate to <code>~/kde/src/dolphin</code> and press <code>OK</code>
 
{{Info|Along the bottom of the window are buttons to configure, build, run, debug, etc.}}

Latest revision as of 17:42, 18 April 2024