1245

I am used to Resharper where I can search for files, not the content, but the filename, which makes it quick to open new files.

Is this feature implemented in Visual Studio Code and is there a shortcut for it?

3
  • 1
    Can we use wildcards to search for a particular file? Example markdown files starting with Pan as Pan*.md
    – Porcupine
    Commented May 19, 2018 at 1:11
  • you can make it with Explorer Tree stackoverflow.com/a/61460710/2736742
    – A. Morel
    Commented Jun 4, 2020 at 16:05
  • Why is such a common task not intuitive! Judging by the likes on this question many people are annoyed with the lack of it :) Commented Mar 2 at 7:37

21 Answers 21

1917

Using Go to File... which is under the Go menu or using keyboard shortcut:

  • On Windows Ctrl+p or Ctrl+e
  • On macOS Cmd ⌘+p
  • On Linux Ctrl+p or Ctrl+e

Then type the file name.

Also be sure to checkout that you can set your own keybindings and that there are cheatsheets available for Windows, macOS and Linux.

19
  • 30
    this (and ctrl/cmd+p) doesn't work for excluded folders such as node_modules. it would be nice to have a way to search all files at times.
    – Sonic Soul
    Commented Jun 7, 2016 at 23:38
  • 27
    This seems to only work for the current folder. What if I want to search across the entire project? My files are rarely in the folder I'm currently in.
    – Julian
    Commented Jun 13, 2016 at 17:23
  • 13
    On OSX cmd + e searches on the current file, the correct key binding is cmd + p that brings the command palette where you can search for files and much more
    – Tiago
    Commented Dec 22, 2016 at 12:16
  • 29
    This answer looks obsolete or incorrect. Another answer is correctly stating that the right combination is cmd + p. Commented Jan 24, 2017 at 12:12
  • 18
    This search only recent files, not all files Commented Jun 12, 2018 at 9:20
113

Since the 1.70.0 release in July 2022, you can find and filter in tree views such as the Find Explorer. You can press Ctrl+Alt+F inside trees to pop up the Find control.

Before the 1.70.0 release

when you click anywhere in the explorer tree, and start typing something on the keyboard, the search keyword appears in the top right corner of the screen : ("module.ts")

enter image description here

And when you hover over the keyword with the mouse cursor, you can click on "Enable Filter on Type" to filter tree with your search !

20
  • 19
    This would be a great approach but for some reason the results are restricted to only a few items. E.g. I know I have around 30 odd files of a certain name in a monorepo - when I follow these instructions the results are limited to 6 files it seams
    – Jacques
    Commented Sep 14, 2020 at 9:24
  • 13
    I'm on 1.52 and it only shows files that were visible (not in a collapsed folder) in the tree before filtering. @A.Morel try your example again but this time before you filter collapse the "dinner" folder. When you apply the filter not only will the file in that folder not appear, but the folder won't even be listed. Commented Feb 5, 2021 at 15:43
  • 2
    I've created this to see if it could be improved github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/129340
    – Brett
    Commented Jul 25, 2021 at 11:37
  • 6
    Why after 2 years I'm only finding this now. There should be some initial UI for this and not just a key press feature.
    – Kalnode
    Commented Jan 26, 2022 at 15:53
  • 6
    This is deprecated. No more work. Check this answer for the new way and the details stackoverflow.com/a/73459511/7668448. Focus on tree and CMD/CTRL + F Commented Aug 23, 2022 at 13:20
87

On OSX, for me it's cmd ⌘ + p. cmd ⌘ + e just searches within the currently opened file.

6
  • 1
    Using VS Code Version 1.7.2 Cmd+P (Mac) or Ctrl+P (Windows) brings up the Command Palette. This gives you access to an entire set of commands including File Search. See the docs at code.visualstudio.com/docs/editor/codebasics
    – bitsand
    Commented Dec 13, 2016 at 17:15
  • This should be the accepted answer, commands have changed in more recent versions.
    – Tyguy7
    Commented Jul 24, 2017 at 22:19
  • Yes, CTRL+P allows to to type a file name in and open it. But it replaces currently opened file. How can I keep opening files just like gong through Solution Explorer and clicking files?
    – Mark
    Commented Aug 15, 2019 at 9:36
  • @Mark when the filename is in italics, it will be replaced by the next file you open. Select "Keep Open" (right-click the tab), or use "View: Keep Editor" in the command palette.
    – bronson
    Commented Jan 23, 2020 at 23:04
  • Or, @Mark, a much better answer: stackoverflow.com/questions/38713405/…
    – bronson
    Commented Jan 24, 2020 at 0:22
63

Method 1

  1. Go → Go to File (shortcut: Ctrl + p).

  2. Search for your file:

    video with steps of method 1

Method 2

  1. View → command palette (shortcut: Ctrl + Shift + p).

  2. Type "Go to file"

  3. Search for your file:

    video with steps of method 2

0
41

Win: CTRL+P or CTRL+E

Mac: CMD+P or CMD+E


Don't want to remember another shortcut?

Open the Command Palette:

  • Menu: View -> Command Palette
  • Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+Shift+P

and hit backspace to delete ">" character and then begin typing to search for files via filename. :)

1
  • 1
    Deleting ">" was the key!
    – hoper
    Commented May 20, 2021 at 15:15
31

Other answers don't mention this command is named workbench.action.quickOpen.

You can use this to search the Keyboard Shortcuts menu located in Preferences.

On MacOS the default keybinding is cmd ⌘ + P.

(Coming from Sublime Text, I always change this to cmd ⌘ + T)

2
  • I accidentally deleted the CMD + P shortcut and now i can't recover it ; the d workbench.action.quickOpen does not show on my commands list... What can i do ? Commented Jul 18, 2019 at 16:19
  • You can search for the action by typing the name of the action into the Keybindings search bar in the Keybindings view. When it appears in the search results, simply click the + icon on the left side to set a keybinding again
    – JLF
    Commented Jul 18, 2019 at 21:06
28

For filtering in the tree on keyboard typing. The feature is deprecated. No more work.

No more of this old red inflexible box:

enter image description here

The replacement is way better and more interesting:

Actually not really. It could have been. The new way only filters on expanded folders only. And that's a shame. Check the last session for where the development is at. And for the options we are left with.

https://code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_70#_tree-find-control

CMD + F (mac) or CTRL + F (else) [while focused]

vscode tree filtering new implementation

enter image description here

No settings are needed. It just works. And more elegantly (except for the problem of only filtering searching through the visible expanded directories).

And for the default mode. highlight or filter. You can change that with:

"workbench.list.defaultFindMode": "highlight"
"workbench.list.defaultFindMode": "filter"

enter image description here

Only the open folders and visible elements Problem and what are we at?

It's great to know about this feature. But then you'll soon encounter the limitation it has at the moment.

Filtering only through open directories. It can help great. But then we want to filter through all. And when the project is big. That becomes totally unusable.

Issues: 1, 2, 3

We can see it's added to the backlog here: https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/116286

duplicates: 1

You may think:

Expand all

Ok what about expanding all. Then using this. ===> That would work great => But => There is no such a feature of expanding all now.

Issues: 1, 2, duplicates: 1

Some configuration

At the moment no configuration does help!

"workbench.list.keyboardNavigation": "filter"

doesn't and many others. I tried them all. For the moment!

Extension that does that probably using web view

None exists. And to be implemented one needs to figure out the indexation used by vscode. Or implement its own indexation and then fuzzy search through using indexes. Otherwise something more simple that works for no big directories. Can be built fast. [I don't have time to do it myself. Especially that this would be resolved sometime in the future and we still can work with CTRL|CMD + P]

So that to clear for you the thoughts that you may get. And save you time.

Resume

So shortly we may see the feature of filtering all in a future version of vscode as it was added to the backlog. Right now we will be waiting. And maybe long enough.

Expand all seems not to be coming at any time or any time soon.

✨ So what now? Left with nothing? Here is a WORKAROUND ✨

The now is => use CTRL|CMD + F on visible things. or on folders. By manually expanding them.

Or use CTRL|CMD + P without closing it. By following the next rules:

enter image description here

  • To open multiple files in the same editor. Navigate up and down and for each file use Right Arrow.
  • When they open they will be opened beside each other. You can use CMD|CTRL + ALT + LEFT | RIGHT to navigate between tabs left and right. Faster and better with the keyboard. The last open is the one you'll be at when you close the pallet.
  • To open a file in a new split editor use ALT + RIGHT ARROW.

Ref: 1

UPDATE 26/07/2023 (vscode 1.80.1):

  • Nothing useful. Except for some new features. But filtering is the same.

As of now the search and filter in the file explorer are as follows:

enter image description here

  • Fuzzy match is added 🔥
  • The filter is always there

Here a preview of the fuzzy search

enter image description here

Otherwise here are some notes on the current state:

  • When you use the filtering, it will filter only what is visible
    • (No change)
  • Always no option for expanding all.
    • (no change)
  • If you click on a folder and the folder has no sub dir, if it contains something it would show, if not it would disappear.
    • Simply because when you expand, all become visible, then filtering applies.
  • Search navigation added 🔥
    • If you search for something. And results are found. You can navigate by the Up and down keys.
    • That was demonstrated on the fuzzy search gif example above.

Here are some previews that show how, if the project structure is small. You still can find the filtering on the explorer good for many use cases.

  • Navigation

enter image description here

  • Filtering

enter image description here

 - Even if not found, the search in visible only. So you have to check folders

enter image description here

 - You can still navigate and filter in such a manner.
 - It can still be useful. Depending on your case and the size of the project.
 - Specially if you needed to go through project structure.
 - Otherwise, the workaround by the command pallet is our best solid tool 🔥.

enter image description here

 - In big projects. Or directory it's totally useless.
 - (no one wants to play super Mario).

enter image description here

 - Once you go through all
     - Disable the filtering and u get all expanded
     - activate filter again, and filtering go right (already all is expanded)
5
  • 1
    as of October 2022 this is the only correct answer. Thanks!
    – Nick
    Commented Oct 23, 2022 at 12:44
  • 4
    no it doesn't work. It will filter files that are in the expanded folders, but it will not search files in your workspace. Commented Oct 27, 2022 at 20:29
  • 2
    This is totally unusable for big folder trees, since it does not search for files which are not in expanded folders.
    – Étienne
    Commented Nov 17, 2022 at 13:08
  • 1
    I do agree. At first, when I wrote I didn't pay attention. Then I was busy with life to update the answer. I just did. So that people don't fall for that deception. you can check the update. Unfortunately, we are bound to wait. There isn't a way now. I included the logical workaround that we can go for at the moment. Commented Nov 17, 2022 at 14:39
  • Very thorough answer. Crazy that this is unfixed for 5 years... remember to upvote the GitHub issue: github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/66971
    – pyjamas
    Commented May 7 at 0:10
24

Also works in ubuntu with Ctrl+E

2
  • 2
    Works on Windows 7 as well!
    – Scofield
    Commented Dec 4, 2018 at 9:03
  • Works for me on Windows 10!
    – Apps 247
    Commented Oct 21, 2020 at 13:58
20

You can also press F1 to open the Command Palette and then remove the > via Backspace. Now you can search for files, too.

3
  • 3
    This is the same as pressing Cmd + P
    – Jacques
    Commented Sep 14, 2020 at 9:25
  • 1
    One difference is, this method is cross-platform Commented Jul 22, 2021 at 17:11
  • This is a good answer, but sadly this also lists files outside of the scope of the project, at least in my case.
    – MattyMatt
    Commented May 8 at 1:05
19

The problem with Ctrl+P (or Cmd+P) is that it searches your workspace while ignoring files and folders set in the .gitignore file. To change this behavior, add "search.useIgnoreFiles": false in your settings.json file under .vscode directory.

NOTE that search.exclude and files.exclude settings will override this. So, in your settings.json file, you should comment them out or set these two settings to false as well if you want to search all the files and directories in your VS Code project. An example for settings.json where search.exclude and files.exclude are commented out for searching all the files:

{
    "search.exclude": {
        //"**/Lib": true,
        //"**/Scripts": true
    },
    "files.exclude": {
        //"**/Lib": true,
        //"**/Scripts": true
    },
    "search.useIgnoreFiles": false
}

Look here for more info.

1
  • Is there any way to quickly disable excluded files for just a single search instead of modifying the settings? Commented Jul 13, 2022 at 3:18
16

consider you have thousand of files in vs code and you want to search for a file with particular name then

  1. Right click VS code editor.
  2. Select Command Palete
  3. In the text box type the file name

enter image description here

enter image description here

1
  • 13
    Need to press backspace when inside the Command Palette, before starting to type file name.
    – gomisha
    Commented Jun 26, 2018 at 10:39
13

I'm using VSCode 1.12.1

OSX press : Cmd + p

0
12

If you just want to search a single file name

Just Ctrl+P, then type and choose your one

If you want to open all files whose name contains a particular string

  1. Open search panel
  2. Put any common words inside those files
  3. in 'files to include', put the search string with *, e.g. *Signaller*

enter image description here

5
  • The "search panel" is called Find in Files (Ctrl+Shift+F). To access "files to include" you need to click the "..." icon (Toggle Search Details) or 4 times tab, then space and tab again. Commented Mar 11, 2020 at 4:41
  • 5
    Put any common words inside those files. That's the issue. I'd love to find every file with a certain name. Commented Aug 10, 2020 at 17:29
  • @BernhardDöbler same here!
    – Jacques
    Commented Sep 14, 2020 at 9:26
  • @BernhardDöbler you can use the regex search and search for .* as a workaround if you're not looking for binary files
    – cladelpino
    Commented Feb 21, 2022 at 22:23
  • Type ^(?<![\w\W]) to search bar after toggling "Use Regex", this regex matches the start of file, so it will list all files once
    – Sahin
    Commented Aug 20 at 9:21
7

For windows. if Ctrl+p doesn't always work use Ctrl+shift+n instead.

6

To search for specifil file types in visual studio code.
Type ctrl+p and then search for something like *.py.
Simple and easy

5

If using vscodevim extension, ctrl + p won't work so I saw another answer using:

ctrl + shift + p

which opens the command palette. Hit backspace to remove the '>' and then start typing your filename.

4

Ok, coming from a big Tmux + Vim user that often wants VSCode to "bend to my will", this is how I looked at it.

  • CMD+P is sub-optimal when you have a large workspace. The alternative here is to "use less folders in the VSCode workspace" (since VSCode cries and buckles it's knees trying to index things as they are even added) / "use more workspaces". If you use less folders and files, then CMD+P fuzzy-search works fine
  • CMD+F is find IN files, not FOR files. If that's your thing, sure, go for it, but I want to find a file deep in a project quickly and open it up, not drill down 10 levels like a cave man.

What I found works best, is this:

  • Click on the folder I am currently working on code changes for on the left side > Open integrated termainl
  • Issue `find src/ -name "something*.ts"
  • CMD + Mouse Click the file and voila! Pops into the editor.

The fact I can't right click or CMD+SHIFT+F can't just show me files when it even prepends the path for "files to include" and deep searches the files anyway.... is bonkers to me. The find mechanism with CMD+SHIFT+ already has the capability, just show me the FILES, not what's IN the files as an option. 90% of the work is already there.

So TL:DR, if you want to find a file quickly in a folder, just open a terminal, find it, and CMD + <Mouse Click>.

1
  • Thanks! You expressed my feeling for the last year, since my Vim config died. I can't find a file even if I pass it's full path. My right arm is in pain since, for having to scroll hundreds of folders and sub folders with the mouse.
    – ahwelp
    Commented Feb 6 at 21:17
2

Check your settings for 'Use Ignore Files' and 'Use Global Ignore Files'. If these are checked, VSCode won't search any folders listed in .gitignore or .ignore

2

I ended up installing the extension File Name Search. It displays in the side navigation bar all files that match a name part, so I can open them one by one to check them or process them.

  • Ctrl + p: we have to repeat the search for each file
  • Ctrl + f in the explorer: it does not search, it just filters files in epanded folders

Here is a demo of a search in explorer followed by a search in the Filename search extension:

enter image description here

1

With VSCode 1.75 (Jan 2023), you will have a new file filter option: a 'Fuzzy Match' toggle.

That comes from issue 116286: Tree: Support continuous find

In a list of files I can filter them by start typing the name of the file. It is a super useful feature when you have hundreds+ files.
My issue is that the filter is trying to find the letters in the whole file name.
Here is an example search for word "file":

this-is-**file**-i-looked-for.jpeg (I expect this to be returned)
**f**or-th**i**s-**l**.jp**e**g    (This should not be returned, it is only a random match)

Would it be possible to add there extra settings to only returns full strings matches? Or is there some setting already buried somewhere?

Solution: adding a 'Fuzzy Match' toggle button to the tree find widget.

https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/6726799/199584855-b57f8efe-0efa-4e97-8523-6fb26d61a951.gif

New options:

  • defaultFindMatchTypeSettingKey.fuzzy: Use fuzzy matching when searching.
  • defaultFindMatchTypeSettingKey.contiguous': Use contiguous matching when searching.
3
  • This is not a real search feature. It is morelike a filtering feature which works with only open folder's content. So, this not a solution for the problem when you want to search in the filenames of the entire application.
    – Crepkey
    Commented Jun 10 at 11:45
  • @Crepkey yes, I use it all the time to find a file within my project workspace (not just folder).
    – VonC
    Commented Jun 10 at 20:27
  • Interesting... So, you claim you can use this filter feature to find any file in your project even though all of your folders are closed in the file browser. Could you please present it somehow here? Maybe, we are wrong and you know the truth. Many thanks :)
    – Crepkey
    Commented Jun 12 at 9:26
1

tl;dr

Use right arrow key!
Opens files in tabs, without closing current search!!!


Full Steps

⌘+p
🔎
⬆️ / ⬇️
➡️

In-depth / Explanation

1 Open command palette

cmd + p

2 Search

Type name of file you're searching for

3 Up/Down Highlight

Use up/down arrows to highlight file you want to open

4 Right Arrow

Use right arrow key to open highlighted file in new tab

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