267

I have both TypeScript and HTML files in my project, in both files tabs are converted to spaces.

I want to turn the auto-conversion off and make sure that my project has only tabs.

Edit:

With this setting it seems to work in HTML files but not in TypeScript files.

{
  "editor.insertSpaces": false
}
1

13 Answers 13

450

There are 3 options in .vscode/settings.json:

// The number of spaces a tab is equal to.
"editor.tabSize": 4,

// Insert spaces when pressing Tab.
"editor.insertSpaces": true,

// When opening a file, `editor.tabSize` and `editor.insertSpaces` will be detected based on the file contents.
"editor.detectIndentation": true

editor.detectIndentation detects it from your file, you have to disable it. If it didn't help, check that you have no settings with higher priority. For example when you save it to User settings it could be overwritten by Workspace settings which are in your project folder.

Update:

To access these settings, you can open File » Preferences » Settings, click the Manage cog icon at the bottom left, or use the keyboard shortcut:

CTRL+, (Windows, Linux)

+, (Mac)

Update:

Now you have an alternative to editing those options manually.
Click on selector Spaces:4 at the bottom-right of the editor:
 Ln44, Col .  [Spaces:4] . UTF-8 with BOM . CTRLF . HTML . :)

EDIT:
To convert existing indentation from spaces to tabs hit Ctrl+Shift+P and type:

>Convert indentation to Tabs

This will change the indentation for your document based on the defined settings to Tabs.

4
186

To change tab settings, click the text area right to the Ln/Col text in the status bar on the bottom right of vscode window.

The name can be Tab Size or Spaces.

A menu will pop up with all available actions and settings.

enter image description here

2
  • 5
    For me, this only changes these settings for the particular file I'm currently viewing. The other files in the project keep their old settings. How would you set it universally? Aug 24, 2018 at 15:49
  • I usually replace all my files at once, if I need to, by doing a project search for the simple regex ` {4}` and replace with \t (for tabs). Usually also glance over the matches to make sure nothing will break like multi-line string literals, etc. Obviously apply these settings so that your new indentations are the desired characters, too! Nov 19, 2019 at 15:28
58

Ctrl+Shift+P, then "Convert Indentation to Tabs"

3
  • 1
    Is it possible to do this for a selection and not the whole file?
    – dbrane
    Apr 8, 2021 at 19:11
  • 1
    is it possible to do this for a whole repo and not just one file? May 13, 2021 at 17:13
  • @dbrane Yes. If you highlight a block of code in a file, the conversion applies just within the selection. Btw, on Mac the key combo is ⌥ + P (alt/option + P).
    – Trutane
    Oct 6, 2021 at 1:09
37

If you want to use tabs instead of spaces

Try this:

  1. Go to FilePreferencesSettings or just press Ctrl + ,
  2. In the Search settings bar on top insert editor.insertSpaces
  3. You will see something like this: Editor: Insert Spaces and it will be probably checked. Just uncheck it as show in image below

Editor: Insert Spaces

  1. Reload Visual Studio Code (Press F1 ➤ type reload window ➤ press Enter)

If it doesn't worked try this:

It's probably because of installed plugin JS-CSS-HTML Formatter

(You can check it by going to FilePreferencesExtensions or just pressing Ctrl + Shift + X, in the Enabled list you will find JS-CSS-HTML Formatter)

If so you can modify this plugin:

  1. Press F1 ➤ type Formatter config ➤ press Enter (it will open the file formatter.json)
  2. Modify the file like this:
 4|    "indent_size": 1,
 5|    "indent_char": "\t"
——|
24|    "indent_size": 1,
25|    "indentCharacter": "\t",
26|    "indent_char": "\t",
——|
34|    "indent_size": 1,
35|    "indent_char": "\t",
36|    "indent_character": "\t"
  1. Save it (Go to FileSave or just press Ctrl + S)
  2. Reload Visual Studio Code (Press F1 ➤ type reload window ➤ press Enter)
4
  • If you want spaces instead of tabs, modify formatter.json file: put one space in any quotation mark instead of \t (So "\t" became " "), and put 4 where you see 1. So you come might be like this "indent_size": 4, "indent_char": " " "indent_size": 4, "indentCharacter": " ", "indent_char": " ", "indent_size": 4, "indent_char": " ", "indent_character": " " Apr 9, 2019 at 16:55
  • 2
    The RELOAD WINDOW step was what I was missing. Frustrating to have gone the process of checking boxes and fiddling with settings 3 times for no changes to take, when all I had to do was reload window. Thanks for the tip! Dec 18, 2019 at 8:50
  • 1
    Reloading VS Code did the trick
    – DemiA
    Oct 21, 2022 at 15:22
  • 1
    thank you. The only answer, describing how to do it.
    – Alex Sham
    Mar 10, 2023 at 18:16
10

Below settings are worked well for me,

"editor.insertSpaces": false,
"editor.formatOnSave": true, // only if you want auto fomattting on saving the file
"editor.detectIndentation": false

Above settings will reflect and applied to every files. You don't need to indent/format every file manually.

10

Check this from official vscode setting:

// Controls whether `editor.tabSize#` and `#editor.insertSpaces` will be automatically detected when a file is opened based on the file contents.
"editor.detectIndentation": true,

// The number of spaces a tab is equal to. This setting is overridden based on the file contents when `editor.detectIndentation` is on.
"editor.tabSize": 4,

// Config the editor that making the "space" instead of "tab"
"editor.insertSpaces": true,

// Configure editor settings to be overridden for [html] language.
"[html]": {
    "editor.insertSpaces": true,
    "editor.tabSize": 2,
    "editor.autoIndent": false
}
9

In my case, the problem was JS-CSS-HTML Formatter extension installed after january update. The default indent_char property is space. I uninstalled it and the weird behavior stops.

1
  • Oh yes, this is was the actual issue for me. spend a lot of time tinkering around setting in VS code. finally disabling this extension solved the problem.
    – Avijeet
    May 13, 2017 at 13:43
9
  1. Highlight your Code (in file)
  2. Click Tab Size in bottom righthand corner of application window Tab Size in bottom righthand corner of application window image
  3. Select the appropriate Convert Indentation to Tabs Select the appropriate Convert Indentation to Tabs image
6

File -> Preferences -> Settings or just press Ctrl + , and search for spaces, then just deactivate this option:

enter image description here

I had to reopen the file so the changes would take effect.

2

If you want to change tabs to spaces in a lot of files, but don't want to open them individually, I have found that it works equally as well to just use the Find and Replace option from the left-most tools bar.

In the first box (Find), copy and paste a tab from the source code.

In the second box (Replace), enter the number of spaces that you wish to use (i.e. 2 or 4).

If you press the ... button, you can specify directories to include or ignore (i.e. src/Data/Json).

Finally, inspect the result preview and press Replace All. All files in the workspace may be affected.

2

Set this to false if you are using .sass files and it's giving you the Expected tabs, was spaces error:

"editor.detectIndentation": false

... then select your block of code and indent it by pressing the tab key and indent it back by pressing the shift + tab key.

1

In my case it was about unchecking

Prettier: Use Tabs

on VSCode settings

-2
{
  "editor.insertSpaces": true
}

True works for me.

0

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