672

When using git at the command line, I am wondering if it is possible to use Visual Studio Code as the default editor, i.e. when creating commit comments and looking at a diff of a file from the command line.

I understand that it won't be possible to use it for doing merges (at least at the minute) but does anyone know if it is possible to use it for looking at diff's, and if so, what command line options would be required in the .gitconfig file to make this happen?

UPDATE 1:

I have tried an approach similar to what I have done for Notepad++ in the past, i.e.

#!/bin/sh

"c:/Program Files (x86)/Notepad++/notepad++.exe" -multiInst -notabbar -nosession -noPlugin "$*"

And used:

#!/bin/sh

"C:\Users\gep13\AppData\Local\Code\app-0.1.0\Code.exe" "$*"

But this results in an error message:

C:\temp\testrepo [master +1 ~0 -0]> git commit
[8660:0504/084217:ERROR:crash_reporter_win.cc(70)] Cannot initialize out-of-process crash handler
Aborting commit due to empty commit message.
C:\temp\testrepo [master +1 ~0 -0]>

Code opens up correctly, with the expected content, but it isn't waiting on the response, i.e. clicking save and closing the window to return to prompt.

UPDATE 2:

I have just heard back from one of the developers working on VSCode. Looks like this functionality currently isn't supported :-(

https://twitter.com/IsidorN/status/595501573880553472

If you are interested in seeing this feature get added, you might want to think about adding your votes here:

http://visualstudio.uservoice.com/forums/293070-visual-studio-code/suggestions/7756482-support-git-configure-diff-and-merge-tools

UPDATE 3:

I have been reliably informed that this feature has been picked up by the VSCode team, so I am looking forward to a future release that will include it.

UPDATE 4:

Thanks to @f-boucheros comment below, I have been able to get VS Code working as the default editor for commit comments, rebase, etc. I would still like to see if it is possible to use it as the diff tool as well.

UPDATE 5:

As per the accepted answer for the question, this is now possible using the V1.0 release of code.

1

19 Answers 19

1129

In the most recent release (v1.0, released in March 2016), you are now able to use VS Code as the default git commit/diff tool. Quoted from the documentations:

  1. Make sure you can run code --help from the command line and you get help.
  • if you do not see help, please follow these steps:
    • Mac: Select Shell Command: Install 'Code' command in path from the Command Palette.
    • Command Palette is what pops up when you press shift + + P while inside VS Code. (shift + ctrl + P in Windows)
    • Windows: Make sure you selected Add to PATH during the installation.
    • Linux: Make sure you installed Code via our new .deb or .rpm packages.
  1. From the command line, run git config --global core.editor "code --wait"

Now you can run git config --global -e and use VS Code as editor for configuring Git. enter image description here Add the following to enable support for using VS Code as diff tool:

[diff]
    tool = default-difftool
[difftool "default-difftool"]
    cmd = code --wait --diff $LOCAL $REMOTE

This leverages the new --diff option you can pass to VS Code to compare two files side by side.

To summarize, here are some examples of where you can use Git with VS Code:

  • git rebase HEAD~3 -i allows you to interactively rebase using VS Code
  • git commit allows you to use VS Code for the commit message
  • git add -p followed by e for interactive add
  • git difftool <commit>^ <commit> allows you to use VS Code as diff editor for changes
16
  • 133
    I also found addinng --new-window to the command to be helpful. This way the git operation will open in a new window.
    – jrotello
    Apr 19, 2016 at 21:57
  • 2
    When we talk about command line we mean Ctrl+Shift+P ? Mine is not working (no code --help available) and i do not understand what means: "Make sure you selected Add to PATH during the installation" What should i do to check it? Can someone please help me? Aug 31, 2016 at 10:52
  • 2
    Note as of v1.1 you need to disable "hot exit" or remember to explicitly save the file before exiting vscode otherwise git won't see any changes. If you prefer to be reminded to save on exit you can disable this feature by editing your user settings: Insert "files.hotExit": "off" at the bottom of your config Mar 2, 2017 at 5:00
  • 11
    I had to use git config core.editor "code -n --wait" with VS Code 1.17.2, running from external command line. Both code and code --wait got me the "Aborting commit due to empty commit message." Oct 28, 2017 at 20:25
  • 6
    And merge is now available as well as: [merge] tool = vscode [mergetool "vscode"] cmd = code --wait $MERGED
    – Sting
    Nov 21, 2019 at 18:44
121
git config --global core.editor "code --wait"

or

git config --global core.editor "code -w"

verify with:

git config --global -e

Your configuration will open in Visual Studio Code.

2
  • For the check, it should actually be git config --global - e
    – Worm
    Apr 21, 2022 at 12:02
  • 1
    git config --global core.editor "code --wait" did the trick
    – Rafa
    Aug 13, 2022 at 19:03
55

For what I understand, VSCode is not in AppData anymore.

So Set the default git editor by executing that command in a command prompt window:

git config --global core.editor "'C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft VS Code\code.exe' -w"

The parameter -w, --wait is to wait for window to be closed before returning. Visual Studio Code is base on Atom Editor. if you also have atom installed execute the command atom --help. You will see the last argument in the help is wait.

Next time you do a git rebase -i HEAD~3 it will popup Visual Studio Code. Once VSCode is close then Git will take back the lead.

Note: My current version of VSCode is 0.9.2

I hope that help.

6
  • Thanks! What is the significance of the -w and where did you find that documented? Oct 28, 2015 at 7:22
  • 1
    Good point. It's coming from Atom -w is for Wait. I edited my answer. Oct 28, 2015 at 14:36
  • I have set this up, and I am happy to say that it is working. If I could get this to work now as Visual Studio Code doing the diffing of the files as well, that would be great! :-) Oct 28, 2015 at 19:19
  • 12
    this now seems to no longer work with the latest update to VS Code. Do you have any ideas? Thanks! Nov 10, 2015 at 20:17
  • 4
    @GaryEwanPark: You need to launch code.cmd (or code on *nix) from the bin subdirectory instead, for the command line options to work. Ideally you would add the bin subdirectory to your %PATH% environment variable (the installer does that for you, too), and configure the editor running git config --global core.editor "code --wait". Aug 29, 2017 at 11:19
38

Another useful option is to set EDITOR and VISUAL environment variables. These environment variables are used by many applications and utilities to know what editor to use. Git also uses one of them (depending on Git version) if no core.editor is set.

You can set it for current session using:

export EDITOR="code --wait"
export VISUAL="$EDITOR"

This way not only git, but many other applications will use VS Code as an editor.

To make this change permanent, add this to your ~/.profile for example. See this question for more options.


Another advantage of this approach is that you can set different editors for different cases:

  1. When you working from local terminal.
  2. When you are connected through SSH session.

This is useful especially with VS Code (or any other GUI editor) because it just doesn't work without GUI.

On Linux OS, put this into your ~/.profile:

# Preferred editor for local and remote sessions
if [[ -n $SSH_CONNECTION ]]; then # SSH mode
  export EDITOR='vim'
else # Local terminal mode
  export EDITOR='code -w'
fi
export VISUAL="$EDITOR"

This way when you use a local terminal, the $SSH_CONNECTION environment variable will be empty, so the code -w editor will be used, but when you are connected through SSH, then $SSH_CONNECTION environment variable will be a non-empty string, so the vim editor will be used. It is console editor, so it will work even when you are connected through SSH.


For the difference between EDITOR and VISUAL environment variables please see this question.

2
  • 3
    I've discovered that, with Git 2.30.1 on macOS at least, if no core.editor config is provided, Git uses the $VISUAL environment variable, rather than $EDITOR. So I like this answer, but I also added a line below fi stating export VISUAL="$EDITOR" to sync them up.
    – Chris
    Mar 6, 2021 at 16:14
  • GIT_EDITOR='code --wait' worked for me on Ubuntu 22.04; git 2.34.1; VS Code 1.68.1. Setting EDITOR did not, and setting git config --global core.editor "code --wait" did not. Jun 24, 2022 at 1:57
20

You need to use command:

git config --global core.editor "'C:\Program Files\Microsoft VS Code\code.exe' -n -w"

Make sure you can start your editor from Git Bash

If you want to use Code.exe with short path, you can do this by adding the following line to your .bash_profile:

alias vscode="C:/Program\ Files/Microsoft\ VS\ Code/Code.exe"

And now, you can call it using only vscode command(or whatever you named it)

Some additional info:

Setup will add Visual Studio Code to your %PATH%, so from the console you can type 'code' to open VS Code on that folder. You will need to restart your console after the installation for the change to the %PATH% environmental variable to take effect.

1
  • 3
    -n is short for --new-window making git open up a new editor window, and -w is short for --wait, making git wait for you to close the window again. This is the only answer that works for me, because I if I already have VS Code open --wait will not work without --new-window. Oct 9, 2018 at 6:25
17

I'm adding an answer because all the others were not succinct enough for my liking/did not fit my exact situation. I'm running a MacBook Air 2021 with an M1 chip

To make VS Code you default git editor in VS Code:

Step 1

Run the command git config --global core.editor "code --wait" in your command line.

Step 2

If you try making a commit at this stage, you might get an error that looks like this:

"hint: Waiting for your editor to close the file... code -w: code: command not found error: There was a problem with the editor 'code -w'".

This means you don't have the shell command "code" installed in VS Code. Use (command + shift + p) to open the command centre in VS Code. Search for "code" and select "Shell Command: Install ‘code’ command in PATH". This adds "code" to your path.

Step 3

While trying to install "code", you might get an error that looks like this:

"EACCES: permission denied, unlink '/usr/local/bin/code'".

I don't know what causes this but a simple uninstall and re-install resolves it. To uninstall, search "uninstall" in the VS Code command centre and select "Shell Command: Uninstall ‘code’ command in PATH"

Step 4

Run the command git config --global -e to test what your new default editor is. Your config file should open in VS Code text editor

Sources:

https://levelup.gitconnected.com/how-to-configure-git-to-use-vs-code-as-the-default-text-editor-ea3670ab525a

VS Code Denied Permission unlink 'usr/local/bin/code'

4

Run this command in your Mac Terminal app

git config --global core.editor "/Applications/Visual\ Studio\ Code.app/Contents/Resources/app/bin/code"
2
  • 3
    This doesn't quite work as you get the error message: Aborting commit due to empty commit message. A wait flag will need to be added. For example --wait.
    – Belfield
    Aug 30, 2017 at 13:09
  • So weird, code didn't work, I needed the full path Oct 29, 2022 at 7:30
3

I opened up my .gitconfig and amended it with:

[core]
    editor = 'C:/Users/miqid/AppData/Local/Code/app-0.1.0/Code.exe'

That did it for me (I'm on Windows 8).

However, I noticed that after I tried an arbitrary git commit that in my Git Bash console I see the following message:

[9168:0504/160114:INFO:renderer_main.cc(212)] Renderer process started

Unsure of what the ramifications of this might be.

5
  • I had also tried that, however, I was getting "fatal: bad config file line 14 in C:\Users\gep13/.gitconfig" then I noticed I had backslashes, where you have forward slashes. Changing those round made it work, but like you I am seeing the "Renderer process started" output, which actually outputs twice for me, and then shows: "[11956:0504/091108:ERROR:ipc_channel_win.cc(136)] pipe error: 109" but the commit actually seems to have worked. May 4, 2015 at 8:12
  • Ah, interesting. It appears that my suggestion only works if you've got Code completely closed (not very convenient!) before making the commit. I encounter the same error you reported in your update if Code is open.
    – miqh
    May 4, 2015 at 8:15
  • interesting indeed. I guess that is where the -multiInst flag for Notepad++ would come into play. I wonder if there is something similar for VSCode. May 4, 2015 at 8:20
  • Just FYI, app-0.1.0/resources/app/env.js appears to contain a few command-line flags that the Code executable takes. None suggest behaviour equivalent to that of -multiInst though.
    – miqh
    May 4, 2015 at 8:51
  • you need to add the --wait flag, and the --new-window flag is also highly recommended, so that the commit msg/diff/whatever doesn't just show up as a new tab in an already-open editor, requiring you to close files you may still be working on in order to signal git that you're done editing. Jul 21, 2017 at 14:41
3

Good news! At the time of writing, this feature has already been implemented in the 0.10.12-insiders release and carried out through 0.10.14-insiders. Hence we are going to have it in the upcoming version 1.0 Release of VS Code.

Implementation Ref: Implement -w/--wait command line arg

1
  • can you comment on how I would be able to use the diff viewer within VSCode to view diff's in git? Apr 11, 2016 at 7:49
3

In addition of export EDITOR="code --wait", note that, with VSCode v1.47 (June 2020), those diff editors will survice a VSCode reload/restart.
See issue 99290:

with commit 1428d44, diff editors now have a chance to survive reloads and this works OK unless the diff editor on a git resource is opened as the active one:

enter image description here

(and commit 24f1b69 fixes that)

3

I added git bash in vscode terminal as default If you are lazy like me. Then I advise you to do the same as me.

  • Step1: Open setting: Ctrl + ,

  • Step2: search .json --> choose file setting.json

  • Step3: Paste the code at the end of the file but in brackets '}'

    "terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows": "gitbash", "terminal.integrated.shell.windows":"E:\app\git\Git\bin\bash.exe",

2

what command line options would be required in the .gitconfig file to make this happen?

I had to add this to my .gitconfig file for git-lense to work:


[core]
    # Make sure that interactive rebases open correctly with vs code
    editor = code -w -n

-n is optional – as Alex mentioned below it's short for --new-window and I find it helpful :)

2
  • 1
    As mentioned in the last answers, you may also config this setting via the CLI, with the command: git config --global core.editor "code -w -n" Feb 16, 2022 at 3:10
  • 1
    -w is short for --wait Feb 16, 2022 at 3:12
1

GitPad sets your current text editor as the default editor for Git.

My default editor for .txt files in Windows 10 is Visual Studio Code and running GitPad once made it the default editor for Git. I haven't experienced the problems mentioned in the question (Git waits until VS Code window is closed in my case).

(The link for the .exe file didn't work for me, you may need to compile the source yourself.)

3
  • What did you point at as the default editor? I have tried to use what is described here: donovanbrown.com/post/2015/07/07/… But that doesn't seem to want to work. Don't really want to point at a specific exe, as that will change as Code is updated. Aug 14, 2015 at 6:58
  • 1
    @Gary, I didn't have to point a specific file, Code was in the list when I did Right click > Open with > Chose another app. I would expect it to register itself on setup (and update the registry with every update so shell can find it) but I couldn't find anything other than "Open with Code" context menu item in the registry. So I really don't have a clearer answer for this, sorry. Aug 14, 2015 at 8:04
  • Hmm, that's weird, I don't have code as an entry in the list that appears when I do that. Aug 14, 2015 at 12:38
1

Just want to add these back slashes to previous answers, I am on Windows 10 CMD, and it doesn't work without back slashes before the spaces.

git config --global core.editor "C:\\Users\\your_user_name\\AppData\\Local\\Programs\\Microsoft\ VS\ Code\\Code.exe"
1
  • I was able to add with: git config --global core.editor "'C:\Users\cbre_admin\AppData\Local\Programs\Microsoft VS Code\Code.exe' -w"
    – rjt011000
    Mar 12, 2019 at 15:02
1

In 2022 on Windows 10 you should have next path:

git config --global core.editor "'C:\Users\<your username here>\AppData\Local\Programs\Microsoft VS Code\code.exe' -w"

0

Im not sure you can do this, however you can try these additions in your gitconfig file.

Try to replace the kdiff3 from these values to point to visual studio code executable.

[merge] tool = kdiff3 [mergetool "kdiff3"] path = C:/Program Files/KDiff3/kdiff3.exe keepBackup = false trustExitCode = false

1
  • As I mentioned in my question, I don't think merging will be supported, as I don't think Visual Studio Code knows how to do this, I suspect it will only be able to do diff and commit messaging. May 4, 2015 at 7:44
0

I set up Visual Studio Code as a default to open .txt file. And next I did use simple command: git config --global core.editor "'C:\Users\UserName\AppData\Local\Code\app-0.7.10\Code.exe\'". And everything works pretty well.

0

on windows 10 using the 64bit insiders edition the command should be:

git config --global core.editor "'C:\Program Files\Microsoft VS Code Insiders\bin\code-insiders.cmd'"

you can also rename the 'code-insiders.cmd' to 'code.cmd' in the 'Program Files' directory, in this way you can now use the command 'code .' to start editing the files on the . directory

0

Just another way to use Visual Studio Code as editor for Git if you can´t change your Git configuration or if you have to set EDITOR to another editor for some reason.

export GIT_EDITOR="code --wait"

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