How can you create multiple cursors when editing in VS Code? I'm interested in both macOS and Windows.
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Update
More multi-cursor features are now available in Visual Studio Code 0.2:
Multi cursor improvements
Ctrl+D selects next occurrence of word under cursor or of the current selection
Ctrl+K Ctrl+D moves last added cursor to next occurrence of word under cursor or of the current selection
The commands use matchCase by default. If the find widget is open, then the find widget settings (matchCase / matchWholeWord) will be used for determining the next occurrence
Ctrl+U undoes the last cursor action, so if you added a cursor too many or made a mistake, you can press Ctrl+U to go back to the previous cursor state. Adding cursor up or down (Ctrl+Alt+Up / Ctrl+Alt+Down) now reveals the last added cursor to make it easier to work with multiple cursors on more than 1 viewport height at a time (i.e. select 300 lines and only 80 fit in the viewport).This makes it a lot easier to introduce multiple cursors
Press Alt and click. Works on Windows and Linux*, should work on Mac too.
* Some distros (e.g. Ubuntu) assign window dragging to Alt+LeftMouse, which will conflict with VSCode. You could change this using gsettings
as mentioned in the other answers.
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9Keyboard shortcuts ? I get that it is command + click. But that's gross.. not quick way :( – Kiba Apr 29 '15 at 20:12
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9Alt+click doesn't seem to work on Linux. What did work for me was Ctrl+shift+left/right/up/down – Yonatan Simson Feb 7 '17 at 12:22
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I had problem with ALT key, fix is to change alt+click
as a Gnome hotkey which clobbers multi-cursor select in VSCode, to super+click
by running:
gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences mouse-button-modifier "<Super>"
Source: http://2buntu.com/articles/1529/visual-studio-code-comes-to-linux/
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6+1 this method works! Just verified it with Ubuntu 14.04.05.. Earlier I tried
dconf-editor
andCompizConfig
to change "move window" plugin configurations and messed up and almost broke my Ubuntu. – Dimitry K Aug 21 '16 at 20:14 -
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6Use
gsettings set org.cinnamon.desktop.wm.preferences mouse-button-modifier "<Super>"
for Linux Mint (Cinnamon). – vossad01 Jun 14 '17 at 23:38 -
Multi-word (and multi-line) cursors/selection in VS Code
Multi-word:
Windows / OS X:
- Ctrl+Shift+L / Cmd+Shift+L selects all instances of the current highlighted word
- Ctrl+D / Cmd+D selects the next instance... and the one after that... etc.
Multi-line:
For multi-line selection, Ctrl+Alt+Down / Cmd+Alt+Down will extend your selection or cursor position to the next line. Ctrl+Right / Cmd+Right will move to the end of each line, no matter how long. To escape the multi-line selection, hit Esc.
See the VS Code keybindings (OS sensitive)
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7Ha ha on my machine the Intel video driver has a hot-key Ctrl-Alt-Down to make the screen go upside down. Caught me off guard :)_ – DaveBoltman Oct 4 '17 at 7:00
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1Why is not the same as SSMS (and presumably Visual Studio), which uses Shift-Alt-Down/Up, not Ctrl-Alt-Down??? – DaveBoltman Oct 4 '17 at 7:01
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@DaveBoltman - I don't know! But you can customise the keybindings. – Dave Everitt Oct 5 '17 at 12:43
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1I had to read far too many answers to finally get to Ctrl+Alt+Down – MikeTheLiar Oct 19 '18 at 19:24
May 2017
As of version 1.13
Add multiple cursors with Ctrl / Cmd + Click
VSCode
developers have introduced a new setting, editor.multiCursorModifier
, to change the modifier key for applying multiple cursors to Cmd + Click
on macOS and Ctrl + Click
on Windows and Linux. This lets users coming from other editors such as Sublime Text or Atom continue to use the keyboard modifier they are familiar with.
The setting can be set to:
ctrl/Cmd
- Maps to Ctrl on Windows and Cmd on macOS.alt
- The existing default Alt.
There's also a new menu item Use Ctrl + Click
for Multi-Cursor
in the Selection
menu to quickly toggle this setting.
The Go To Definition and Open Link gestures will also respect this setting and adapt such that they do not conflict. For example, when the setting is ctrl/Cmd
, multiple cursors can be added with Ctrl / Cmd + Click
, and opening links or going to definition can be invoked with Alt +Click
.
With fixing Issue #2106, it is now possible to also remove a cursor by using the same gesture on top of an existing selection.
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1I was going nuts on why Ctrl+click wasn't working. Didn't know there was an option to toggle it. :-) – dotslash Jul 15 '17 at 6:28
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4Setting the
editor.multiCursorModifier
from alt to ctrlCmd worked great. Now all I have to do is ctrl + click and it will use multiple cursors :) Muchas gracias! – protoEvangelion Jul 15 '17 at 19:45 -
This is the best solution, was wondering why this wasn't working before. Thanks :) – jj172 May 17 '18 at 1:39
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I can change to Ctrl + click, it works, but to go to definition of class or something is gone, how can I fix? – Vuong Tran Jul 26 '18 at 3:18
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This is the most helpful answer. In most editors CTRL+click is used for multiple selection. There is no need to modify the OS behaviour to make an editor work. This option modifies the behaviour for multiple selection to the most commonly used pattern. – Ruby Racer Feb 7 at 9:13
Try Ctrl+Alt+Shift+⬇ / ⬆, without mouse, or hold "alt" and click on all the lines you want.
Note: Tested on Windows.
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Cmd+Option+Shift⬇ / ⬆ works for me on newest VSCode 1.29.1 and newest OSX High Sierra 10.13.6, Macbook Pro.
This adds a vertical line up/down on screen, like Option+Click/Vertical Drag does in Sublime Text.
To add multiple cursors at any points in your file, including multiple ones on the same line, do Cmd (or Option)+Click anywhere you want, shown in this video. You may also search for text (Cmd+F) that repeats multiple times, then press Option+Return to add cursors at end of EACH word.
On Ubuntu, in order to enable multi-cursor clicking you will need to re-assign Alt+click first, by running the command below. This is because by default Ubuntu uses the shortcut itself and has it takes precedence.
> gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences mouse-button-modifier "<Super>"
On XFCE, go to Applications -> Settings -> Settings editor - > xfwm4 -> easy_click(disable value)
Now you can Insert Cursor
with Alt + Click
I've also disabled L/R Workspace (ctrl + alt + L/R) settings in Settings -> Window manager -> Keyboard
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1@Martian2049, it's a Desktop Environment on Unix-like operating systems (Linux, BSD etc). If you don't know this yet, probably my answer won't be useful for you, go check other answers. – lava-lava May 2 '18 at 16:39
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It's working after disabling easy_click for me, thanks you saved my day. – Mohamed M. Hagag Sep 17 '18 at 19:53
As of Visual Studio Code version 0.10.9, you can now do a Create Multiple Cursors from Selected Lines by selecting multiple lines, and pressing Shift+Alt+I
Note: This is similar to Sublime Text's Ctrl+Shift+L functionality.
Source: https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/vJanuary#_thank-you
Relevant PR: https://github.com/Microsoft/vscode/pull/1479
There is no binding for exactly what you want.
The only thing that comes close is Ctrl+F2 which will select all of them at once.
You can bind it to Ctrl+D doing the following:
- Click on
File > Preferences > Keyboard Shortcuts
You should see a pane full of the current bindings and on the right a list of custom bindings - In the current bindings, search for Ctrl+F2 and copy that whole line and paste it into the right pane.
- You might have to remove the comma at the end and then change Ctrl+F2 to Ctrl+D and then save the file.
It should look something like this:
// Place your key bindings in this file to overwrite the defaults
[
{ "key": "ctrl+d", "command": "editor.action.changeAll",
"when": "editorTextFocus" }
]
https://code.visualstudio.com/Updates
New version (Visual Studio 0.3.0) support more multi cursor feature.
Multi-cursor
Here's multi-cursor improvements that we've made.
⌘D selects the word at the cursor, or the next occurrence of the current selection.
⌘K ⌘D moves the last added cursor to next occurrence of the current selection.
The two actions pick up the matchCase and matchWholeWord settings of the find widget.
⌘U undoes the last cursor action, so if you added one cursor too many or made a mistake, press ⌘U to return to the previous cursor state.
Insert cursor above (⌥⌘↑) and insert cursor below (⌥⌘↓) now reveals the last added cursor, making it easier to work with multi-cursors spanning more than one screen height (i.e., working with 300 lines while only 80 fit in the screen).
And short cut of select multi cursor change into cmd + d(it's same as Sublime Text. lol)
We can expect that next version supports more convenient feature about multi cursor ;)
Ctrl+Alt+⬇ / ⬆ add cursors above and below the current line. Still nowhere near as good as sublime or brackets though. I can't see anything equivalent to Ctrl+D in sublime in the keyboard shortcuts file.
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This is the closest thing to the answer OP was looking for imho – Valentine Bondar Jun 27 '17 at 16:18
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In Visual Studio without mouse: Alt+Shift+{ Arrow }.
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Alt+Shift+{ Arrow }
. will result in copying of the current line as of VS Code V1.18.0 – Adarsh Madrecha Nov 11 '17 at 17:09
In my XFCE (version 4.12), it's in Settings -> Window Manager Tweaks -> Accessibility
.
There's a dropdown field Key used to grab and move windows:
, set this to None
.
Alt + Click works now in VS Code to add more cursor.
You can do the following per the Selection menu:
Press/hold Alt+Ctrl+Up Arrow/Alt+Ctrl+Down Arrow as required to create sufficient cursors, then Ctrl+D can be used to expand the selections.
Same issue on Ubuntu-MATE, but here you resolve it by:
gsettings set org.mate.Marco.general mouse-button-modifier "<Super>"
Alt + Command + Shift will add a cursor to the next instance of what you've selected. E.g. a variable or function name
Alt
button and start clicking in different places. That's it. – username Nov 11 '15 at 7:14