101

Is there anyway of executing the npm command within Visual Studio Code (using f1 into >) on Windows(10) to install packages to my folder I'm working in?

I have npm installed and I keep having to install npm packages from cmd

25 Answers 25

115

Install

  • Ctrl+P, write ext install npm script runner
  • Restart VS Code

Use (two ways)

  • Ctrl+R Shift+R
  • Ctrl+P, write >npm, select run script, select the desired task

Update: Since version 1.3 Visual Studio Code has integrated terminal. To open it, use any of these methods:

  • Use the Ctrl+` keyboard shortcut.
  • Use the View | Toggle Integrated Terminal menu command.
  • From the Command Palette (Ctrl+Shift+P), use the View:Toggle Integrated Terminal command.
7
  • 9
    On french keyboard: "Use the Ctrl+` keyboard shortcut." becomes "Ctrl+ù" Oct 3, 2016 at 7:58
  • 2
    On Mac, use 'Cmd+R Shift+R' Jun 1, 2017 at 9:00
  • 7
    Please give a link to the extension from the market. I did not find such an extension. It does not exist. Sep 28, 2018 at 8:13
  • 2
    @dev-siberia there is no need of any extension since the 1.3 version. Just follow the instructions described in the answer for the update. Ctrl + `
    – Javiere
    Sep 29, 2018 at 9:05
  • 1
    Note: if you're launching VS Code from the Anaconda Navigator, you'll need to restart the navigator as well. Feb 27, 2020 at 13:42
54

You can run npm commands directly in terminal (ctrl + `). Make sure that terminal has cmd.exe as the shell selected.

You can default cmd.exe as your shell by following these steps.

  1. ctrl+Shift+p

  2. Type > Terminal: Select Default Profile + Enter

    [older VSCode versions] Type > Select Default Shell + Enter

  3. Select > Command Prompt ...cmd.exe

  4. Restart VS Code.

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  • 5
    even though I've installed several exenstions now, which I though would force npm to come along for the ride.. this tip didn't work for me. All I got: 'npm' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file.
    – bkwdesign
    Dec 29, 2017 at 22:05
  • 11
    Ok.. I don't even have Node.js installed. Per this article I'm realizing that's my first step, as it's not automatically installed w/VS Code
    – bkwdesign
    Dec 29, 2017 at 22:15
  • 1
    I thought I would have node already because I have VS 2022 installed with the node workload installed. Not sure why I have to install it again.
    – tnk479
    Sep 8, 2022 at 1:08
  • Node isn't a mandatory add-on for Visual Studio. But you can still verify if you have node installed in you PC by using this command in CMD > node -v
    – IKriKan
    Sep 20, 2022 at 11:52
  • 2
    "Select default shell" is not available as of VS Code 1.8 Aug 16, 2023 at 15:00
41

There might be a chance that you have install node.js while your visual studio code was open. Once node.js is install successfully, Simply close the VS Code and Start it again. It will work. Thank you

3
  • 5
    NOTE restart the application not reload window. At least as of VSC 1.31.1, this is true. Though this answer states restart the application I expected to be able to get this fixed through a reload window.
    – Itanex
    Feb 22, 2019 at 20:51
  • Note: "close the VS Code" means closing ALL windows :)
    – Daddy32
    Aug 4, 2020 at 11:56
  • This was my problem. It is resolved now. Thank you! Apr 1, 2022 at 15:57
16

On Win10 I had to run VSCode as administrator to npm commands work.

2
  • this worked! lol
    – rapport89
    Jan 12, 2022 at 1:37
  • Thanks, This works for Windows 11 too.
    – Kishor K
    Aug 31, 2022 at 20:54
10

All you need to do is to add args to the integrated terminal within 'User Settings' window.

Follow this steps below to do that:

  1. List item
  2. Go to 'User Settings'
  3. Search for setting named - "terminal.integrated.shellArgs.windows"
  4. Edit this setting by copying it to the right side.
  5. Add the following arg value = "/k nodevars.bat", e.g. "terminal.integrated.shellArgs.windows": ["/k nodevars.bat"],
  6. Make sure that the setting named "terminal.integrated.shell.windows" is set to the value - "C:\Windows\system32\cmd.exe". If not then do that.
  7. Open new Terminal.

Good luck

9

One reason might be if you install the node after starting the vs code,as vs code terminal integrated or external takes the path value which was at the time of starting the vs code and gives you error:

'node' is not recognized as an internal or external command,operable program or batch file.

A simple restart of vs code will solve the issue.

8

I installed npm after Visual studio code, closed all visual studio instances and opened again and it started working.

1
  • 2
    This is a not a fix/relevant suggestion. Please refactor your answer.
    – user9016207
    Jan 28, 2019 at 21:40
6
  1. Edit user setting file settings.json.
    • Settings > Search for settings.json > Edit in settings.json
    or
    • Run > type %APPDATA%\Code\User\settings.json
  2. Copy this code
    { "terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Windows\\System32\\cmd.exe", "terminal.integrated.shellArgs.windows": ["/k nodevars.bat"] }
  3. Restart VS Code
0
5

To install npm on VS Code:

  1. Click Ctrl+P
  2. Write ext install npm script runner
  3. On the results list look for npm 'npm commands for VS Code'. This npm manages commands. Click Install, then Reload VS Code to save changes
  4. Restart VS Code
  5. On the Integrated Terminal, Run 'npm install'
2
  • As for now, date 2018-08-20, the latest version is 0.3.5
    – Juguang
    Aug 20, 2018 at 5:20
  • 2
    does not work for me ! VSCode Terminal keeps saying bash: np: command not found. What do you suggest ? Thanks for any help on this. (Hint: My npm cmds work well under the Mac Terminal. But they absolutely do not work under VSCode Terminal - not even after having followed your steps above.) I try to run Angular cmds such as np version and they do not work in VSCode Terminal. And I am on Mac. Any idea why ?
    – iKK
    Feb 3, 2019 at 12:54
3

Same thing was happening to me after I installed Node.js. Node and npm was recognized in PowerShell and Command Prompt but not in VS Code. I fixed it by adding the Node.js install path to the system's environment PATH variable. The node.js install path on my system was:

C:\Program Files\nodejs

Where I find the node.exe that is needed. The user's PATH variable already had the Node.js install path but for some reason VS Code needs the Node.js install path in the system's PATH variables.

Windows 10 instructions:

  1. Windows key and type "environment"
  2. Select "Edit the system environment variables"
  3. Click button labelled "Environment Variables..."
  4. In "System variables" section edit the "Path" variable
  5. Add Node.js install path to the list (C:\Program Files\nodejs)

The other answers were great but this is another way to fix it that worked for me without needing to install stuff, run as admin, or change the default settings.

2

VSCode User Setup is a new installer which installs VSCode and its dependencies in directories which don't require system-level / administrator permissions to modify. This is because New VSCode runs with user privileges. Your Nodejs installation added npm's path as System variable which VSCode cannot read.

Adding NPM path to Path variable in the User variable, you will be able to run NPM from the integrated command line.

2

Make sure you exit out of the existing terminal window. It will try to recover it and even though you may have closed out of VS Code you want to close the terminal window as well

1

Try to install PowerShell extension provided by VS code.

PowerShell Extension

After install click on PowerShell and It will start new PowerShell Console where you can run all script

PowerShell Console

1

One from this two can help:

A) After you installed NodeJS, and restarted VScode, but still not getting npm to work, then idelete the opened terminal in VSCode with 'recycle' icon and try to create a new instance of terminal. From that moment and onwards, NPM should be working

B) If that doesn't help, then open up the prompt (Ctrl+P) and type >Terminal>Create terminal (with profile) and create 'cmd/powershell' based terminal. Afterwards, npm should be working.

1

Well, anyone still ends up here, and couldn't resolve the problem, Here is how to fix it.

  1. Check the default terminal in VS Code (ctrl+ ~). It should be cmd and not Powershell.

    If it is Powershell, go to settings > features > Terminal › Integrated › Default Profile: Windows. And select Command Prompt. Or in search settings type 'default profile', and select Command Prompt.

  2. Install VS Code extension - npm script runner (npm support for VS Code by Microsoft). Click on extensions marketplace (ctrl + shift + x). Type> npm script runner > install

After these steps, npm should be working from VS Code terminal.

1

Download Node.js from the link here Install and then Then restart

0

There is an extension available, npm Script runner. I have not tried it myself, though.

1
  • 7
    If you have not tried this extension, why are you recommending it?
    – user9016207
    Jan 28, 2019 at 21:38
0

As an alternative to some of the answers suggested above, if you have powershell installed, you can invoke that directly as your terminal. That is edit the corresponding setting.json value as follows:

"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\WINDOWS\\System32\\WindowsPowerShell\\v1.0\\powershell.exe"

I find this works well as the environment is correctly configured.

0

Open standard terminal ctrl+p and paste this command

npm i script-runner

Need to see this logs npm should be run outside of the node repl, in your normal shell. (Press Control-D to exit.)

(To exit, press ^C again or type .exit)

C:\DW\Examples\Ang.Crud>npm i script-runner npm WARN saveError ENOENT: no such file or directory, open 'C:\DW\Examples\Ang.Crud\package.json' npm notice created a lockfile as package-lock.json. You should commit this file. npm WARN enoent ENOENT: no such file or directory, open 'C:\DW\Examples\Ang.Crud\package.json' npm WARN Ang.Crud No description npm WARN Ang.Crud No repository field. npm WARN Ang.Crud No README data npm WARN Ang.Crud No license field.

  • [email protected] added 7 packages from 5 contributors and audited 7 packages in 2.955s found 0 vulnerabilities

Usage: npm

where is one of: access, adduser, audit, bin, bugs, c, cache, ci, cit, completion, config, create, ddp, dedupe, deprecate, dist-tag, docs, doctor, edit, explore, get, help, help-search, hook, i, init, install, install-test, it, link, list, ln, login, logout, ls, outdated, owner, pack, ping, prefix, profile, prune, publish, rb, rebuild, repo, restart, root, run, run-script, s, se, search, set, shrinkwrap, star, stars, start, stop, t, team, test, token, tst, un, uninstall, unpublish, unstar, up, update, v, version, view, whoami

npm -h quick help on npm -l display full usage info npm help search for help on npm help npm involved overview

Specify configs in the ini-formatted file: C:\Users\fdc.npmrc or on the command line via: npm --key value Config info can be viewed via: npm help config

[email protected] C:\Program Files\nodejs\node_modules\npm

0

For me, this problem is fixed after installing the extension ES7 React/Redux/GraphQL/React-Native snippets. I am using windows 10 and the latest version of VS Code, and a little interpreter icon occurred on the lower right of the status bar.

0

Try this.

npm not works in Visual studio code
open vs code then Ctrl+P -> type - ext install npm script runner
you have to choose one and install it.
once installed please close and open Visual studio code and go to vs code terminal and
type npm start and browser will start http://localhost:3000 Its working good. Thanks

0

I restarted my machine, after checking the path in environment variable. it worked for me.

0

In terminal run -> npm install script-runner

1
  • As it’s currently written, your answer is unclear. Please edit to add additional details that will help others understand how this addresses the question asked. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Jul 13, 2022 at 13:27
0

You probably dont have your path variable set for npm on your machine. And typescript has nothing to do with this issue. VS Code is built on TypeScript for type checking when you're using JavaScript. But i'd suggest you to uninstall Node from your machine and re-install Node from here. Make sure you install the latest version of Node. Node comes with npm and it also sets the PATH_VARIABLE for terminal. In order to check if the path variable set or not , you can try this command node --version or npm --version.

-1

You have to do the following 3 steps to fix your issues:

1.Download Node.js from here.

  1. Install it and then add the path C:\Program Files\nodejs to your System variables.

  2. Then restart your visual studio code editor.

Happy code

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