441

I am trying to find the shortcut for duplicating a line in Visual Studio Code (I am using 1.3.1) I tried the obvious CTRL + D but that doesn't seem to work.

6
  • 3
    Ctrl+D for line duplication is not that obvious: it works in Notepad++ for example, but it deletes the current line in Eclipse :)
    – kol
    Aug 8, 2017 at 9:01
  • See the Contextual Duplicate extension
    – CharlesB
    Jan 11, 2018 at 14:07
  • 3
    by default ,CTRL + D just select the next occurrence that was selected vs other IDEs .
    – Amir Kian
    Mar 17, 2020 at 16:37
  • 1
    @kol Having used Visual Studio previously, and VSCode being MS product I would assume that VSCode inherits a lot of things from it. CTRL+D works fine in Visual Studio 2019. May 15, 2021 at 1:26
  • 1
    TheWebGuy, please make more clear/obvious whether you want the clipboard content to survive. It seems implicitly obvious to me that you want that, but some of the answer authors seem of a different opinion. And without you being explicit about this, it is hard to convince them (and voters) that the answer is between unhelpful and wrong.
    – Yunnosch
    Sep 29, 2023 at 13:16

15 Answers 15

669

The default is:

  • Windows / Linux SHIFT+ALT +
  • Mac SHIFT+OPTION +

To change it, click File > Preferences > Keyboard Shortcuts:

enter image description here

Search for copyLinesDownAction or copyLinesUpAction in your keyboard shortcuts


Update for Ubuntu:

It seems that Ubuntu is hiding that shortcut from being seen by VSCode (i.e. it uses it probably by its own). There is an issue about that on GitHub.

In order to work in Ubuntu you will have to define your own shortcut, e.g. to copy the line using ctrl+shift+alt+j and CTRL +SHIFT + ALT + k you could use a keybindings.json like this:

[
    { "key": "ctrl+shift+alt+j", "command": "editor.action.copyLinesDownAction",
                                    "when": "editorTextFocus && !editorReadonly" },
    { "key": "ctrl+shift+alt+k", "command": "editor.action.copyLinesUpAction",
                                    "when": "editorTextFocus && !editorReadonly" }
]
8
  • 10
    On Mac: Code > Preferences > Keyboard Shortcuts. Shift+Option+Down Arrow.
    – jarmod
    Oct 17, 2019 at 0:49
  • 3
    @DAXaholic answer was correct if you need even simple solution just keep the cursor on line which you want to duplicate and press ctrl+c and ctrl+v. it works fine
    – Gopi P
    Oct 18, 2019 at 2:57
  • 2
    On Ubuntu 16.04, by default, the Ctrl + Shift + Up Arrow / Down Arrow shortcuts are mapped to moving windows to different workspaces. You can change this in Ubuntu -->System Settings --> Keyboard --> Shortcuts --> Navigation then press Backspace to delete the unwanted shortcuts.
    – mowen
    Oct 25, 2019 at 16:09
  • 1
    Mine is bound to Ctrl+Shift+Alt+DownArrow, but it doesn't actually do anything when I click those buttons. Apr 2, 2020 at 7:22
  • 14
    On Ubuntu 20.04 it's Ctrl + Alt + Shift + Numpad 2 / Numpad 8.
    – bwdm
    Aug 5, 2021 at 22:06
234

The duplicate can be achieved by CTRL+C and CTRL+V with cursor in the line without nothing selected.

7
  • 80
    I haven't downvoted, but I would imagine this isn't acceptable for the OP as this copies the line into the clipboard, which is one very good reason to want a "duplicate line" command instead of a copy / paste command.
    – Matt Dell
    Apr 18, 2017 at 8:51
  • 2
    This does not work if editor.emptySelectionClipboard option is set to false (my preferred configuration). Sep 21, 2017 at 16:23
  • 41
    This blows away what I had in my clipboard Sep 18, 2019 at 16:37
  • 4
    One interesting this thing I noted in this method is , no need to release Ctrl Key after pressing 'C' ( Release only after releasing V)
    – Arun
    Apr 4, 2020 at 0:16
  • 8
    This ruins the whole purpose of instant line duplication. Jul 23, 2020 at 16:52
175

You can use the following depending on your OS:

Windows:

Shift+ Alt + or
Shift+ Alt +

Mac:

⇧ Shift + ⌥ Option + or
⇧ Shift + ⌥ Option +

Linux:

Ctrl+Shift+Alt+ or
Ctrl+Shift+Alt+

Note: For some linux distros use Numpad arrows

2
  • 3
    That is mapped to GNOME workspace switcher unfortunately on Ubuntu :-( Jun 25, 2022 at 18:18
  • This works in 2022 thanks, it is shift + alt not ctrl Sep 9, 2022 at 20:27
38

Ubuntu :

  • Duplicate Line Up : Ctrl + Alt + Shift + 8
  • Duplicate Line Down : Ctrl + Alt + Shift + 2
2
  • 2
    This is actually a good solution (working on Ubuntu 20 & 19) that does not require any changes to the default setting. Might not seem very intuitively but 8 & 2 are actual Up and Down in the NumPad
    – lui
    May 22, 2020 at 14:09
  • 1
    Default options didn't work for me on Ubuntu 20... neither the keys that you showed here then I went to "File > Preferences > Keyboard Shortcuts then editor.action.copyLinesDownAction" changed the Ctrl + Alt + Shift + ArrowDown (default) to Ctrl + Alt + NumPad2 and worked fine! Thanks! Apr 19, 2022 at 20:40
33

These are the default settings:

Windows:

SHIFT+ALT+ or SHIFT+ALT+

macOS:

SHIFT+OPTION+ or SHIFT+OPTION+

However, if you want to duplicate the line with CTRL+D, then you have to modify the keyboard shortcuts of your VS Code.

Windows:

File > Preferences > Keyboard shortcuts

macOS:

Manage > Keyboard shortcuts

and search for Copy Line Down. From there add CTRL+D or your desired key combination.

enter image description here

16

Use the following: Shift + Alt+( or )

1
  • This is the BEST answer in my opinion, and is exactly what I was looking for. It sure would be nice if there were just "Universal" standards for keyboard shortcuts that everybody who desires to build a reputable product could adhere to. Then, eventually, it would be as commonly understood as "Ctrl-C" which is even typed on keyboards. Why can't we have about 26*3 == 78 universally standardized keyboard shortcuts in the world? 26 for "Ctrl", 26 for "Ctrl+Shift", 26 for "Alt". Then, if products/tools want more than the 78 standard shortcuts, add "Alt+Shift", "Ctrl+Alt+Shift" etc. ? :-)
    – Darrin
    Dec 1, 2022 at 18:20
14

Search for copyLinesDownAction or copyLinesUpAction in your keyboard shortcuts

Usually, it is SHIFT+ALT+

12

There is a new command in v1.40: editor.action.duplicateSelection unbound to any keybinding.

Duplicate selection

We have added a new action named Duplicate Selection. When executed, the current selection will be duplicated and the result will be selected. When there is no selection, the current line will be duplicated, all without writing to the system clipboard.

from https://github.com/microsoft/vscode-docs/blob/vnext/release-notes/v1_40.md

Some may find it helpful in certain situations.

2

It's possible to create keybindings that are only active when Vim for VSCode is on and in a certain mode (i.e., "Normal", "Insert", or "Visual").

To do so, use Ctrl + Shift + P to open up VSCode's Command Palette, then search for "Preferences: Open Keyboard Shortcuts (JSON)"--selecting this option will open up keybindings.json. Here, custom bindings can be added.

For example, here are the classic VSCode commands to move/duplicate lines tweaked for ease of use in Vim..

    [
      {
        "key": "alt+j",
        "command": "editor.action.moveLinesDownAction",
        "when": "editorTextFocus && vim.active && vim.mode == 'Normal'"
      },
      {
        "key": "alt+shift+j",
        "command": "editor.action.copyLinesDownAction",
        "when": "editorTextFocus && vim.active && vim.mode == 'Normal'"
      },
      {
        "key": "alt+k",
        "command": "editor.action.moveLinesUpAction",
        "when": "editorTextFocus && vim.active && vim.mode == 'Normal'"
      },
      {
        "key": "alt+shift+k",
        "command": "editor.action.copyLinesUpAction",
        "when": "editorTextFocus && vim.active && vim.mode == 'Normal'"
      },
    ]

Now we can use these Vim-friendly commands in VSCode!

  • Alt + J to move a line down
  • Alt + K to move a line up
  • Shift + Alt + J to duplicate a line down
  • Shift + Alt + K to duplicate a line up
1
  • I would suggest to change the condition vim.mode == 'Normal' to vim.mode != 'Insert' so that these shortcuts also work when having a visual selection.
    – edobez
    Dec 12, 2023 at 12:55
2

Though there are some right answers already here, I always forget shortcuts in different IDEs and Text Editors especially switching between Windows and Linux.

In Windows VSCode v1.77.3, I've just found that Ctrl+C, Ctrl+V works perfect and easy to remember:

  1. Set cursor on the line you want to duplicate. (Don't select anything)
  2. Ctrl+C
  3. Ctrl+V (press as many as the line count you want to get)
1
  • Completely unintuitive... but works! Jun 1, 2023 at 16:21
1

Another 2 very usefull shortcuts are to move lines selected up and down, like sublime text does...

{
  "key" : "ctrl+shift+down", "command" : "editor.action.moveLinesDownAction",
  "when" : "editorTextFocus && !editorReadonly"
},

and

{
  "key" : "ctrl+shift+up", "command" : "editor.action.moveLinesUpAction",
  "when" : "editorTextFocus && !editorReadonly"
}
2
  • Wrong. You don't need to select a line in ST in order to duplicate it.
    – Green
    Sep 2, 2017 at 8:35
  • shortcuts are to move "lines" selected Dec 4, 2017 at 11:20
1

VC Code Version: 1.22.2, Mac.

  • Go to: Code -> Preferences -> Keyboard Shortcuts (cmd + K; cms + S);
  • Change (edit): "Add Selection To Next Find Match": "cmd + what you want". For me this is "cmd + D" and I pur cmd + F;
  • Go to "Copy Line Down": "cmd + D". You can edit this and set cmd + D for example
0

Update that may help Ubuntu users if they still want to use the and instead of another set of keys.

I just installed a fresh version of VSCode on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS and I had duplicate commands for Add Cursor Above and Add Cursor Below

Original Keybindings

I just removed the bindings that used Ctrl and added my own with the following

Copy Line Up

Ctrl + Shift +

Copy Line Down

Ctrl + Shift +

New Keybindings

0

To copy the current line without selection, ⌘ Command + C will do the trick. For those of you who have vim enabled on VSCode, you will need to ensure that the following is set:

"vim.overrideCopy": false
-3

Windows:

Duplicate Line Down : Ctrl + Shift + D

1
  • 12
    For me, this triggers the built-in debugger. Nov 13, 2019 at 16:25

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.