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At one point I found a way to show line-by-line git blame within vscode. I now cannot recall or find the means with which to do that. I have the Git Blame extension, but that only shows blame on a single selected line.

7 Answers 7

228

Use Gitlens extension. It supports various options. Once installed, you can use Alt+B to show full file blame information.

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  • 131
    So they implemented a ton of functionality but not git blame natively?
    – apanzerj
    May 21, 2018 at 22:29
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    Or Ctrl+Shift+G B, if ones gitlens keymap is configured as 'chorded'.
    – vlad2135
    Jan 24, 2019 at 12:01
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    At least on macOS there is a "Show File Annotation" icon in the top right corner. That toggles a bar showing the blame for each line.
    – Manuel
    Jul 11, 2019 at 23:09
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    Where do you see "Show File Annotation"? I can't find it. Do you use a plugin for this? Jul 14, 2019 at 9:01
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    Once GitLens is installed, it also puts a little circular GitLens icon on the right of the tab bar (icon matches that for the extension in the left-hand activity bar). Clicking that will also show/hide the file blame area.
    – Sam
    Oct 31, 2019 at 12:36
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On Mac, if you have the GitLens plugin, it's CommandOptionGB:

enter image description here

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    this will only works with GitLens Plugin, which you don't mention...
    – snap
    Jul 8, 2021 at 8:31
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    To install GitLens, type Command + Shift + X, search "GitLens", click "install"
    – akki
    Oct 8, 2021 at 19:48
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    Thank you. For anyone else who infrequently uses VS code like myself who was struggling to remember how to access the Command Palette pictured above, it's Command + Shift + P Nov 12, 2021 at 16:17
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    I have GitLens installed and Command Option G B does nothing.
    – Snowcrash
    Nov 1, 2022 at 9:57
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If you use the GitLens plugin, you can also use the "File Annotations" icon in the top right of vscode:

GitLense - File Annotations Menu

Or use the "GitLens: Toggle File Blame" command.

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  • that's the correct answer Feb 16 at 1:13
  • I have git lens but this symbol is nowhere to be found.
    – Black
    May 25 at 9:48
  • @Black you might not be in a git repo. i just tried: (1) new project: no icon. (2) git init: no icon. (3) git add and commit: no icon. (4) close and re-open that file: now the icon shows up as on the screenshot. (i am on the currently latest v13.6.0)
    – omnesia
    May 26 at 15:33
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You can view commit history for an individual file without a plugin using the Timeline view.

enter image description here

See https://stackoverflow.com/a/60013101/337934 for more information.

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    But you can't view what commit a particular line was a part of directly Jun 6, 2022 at 17:03
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    @Ridhuvarshan yup, that is correct, but I didn't want to install another VSCode plugin and this was "good enough" for my case
    – SamB
    Dec 7, 2022 at 19:16
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    The question asks for a "git blame" equivalent: "show line-by-line git blame within vscode". You are giving a "git log" equivalent.
    – memoselyk
    Jan 19 at 14:13
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Add the annotator extension. Here is the marketplace link to add it.

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  • possible usage: ctrl + shift + p, type annotator (or less), choose "Annotator: Annotate the current file or ...". Unfortunately (Annotator 1.0.0, VS Code 1.53.2), the annotated view is opened separately, with no syntax highlighting, block folding, scrolled to the top of the file and ctrl + g not working to go to the line
    – YakovL
    Feb 25, 2021 at 10:25
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I know I'm late here and this is an old question, but, I just installed Git Blame, it's out a while now but seems to be lightweight and very easy to use, I was able to get line by line details of who and when.

enter image description here

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    This looks much better, and simpler. GitLens is completely overbloated. Feb 18 at 14:26
  • Can you share how you got this to show like key combinations or whatever else it took? Jun 1 at 8:56
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GitLens provides the functionality of full-file git blame. To execute the command:
Press Ctrl+Shift+G, followed by pressing only B.

Note: When pressing B, do not press the Ctrl and Shift buttons. The command will work correctly in this manner.

I have personally validated this command on VS Code version 1.81.0 and GitLens version 14.2.0. Some users have reported issues with this command, but it's possible they are inadvertently pressing Ctrl and Shift buttons while pressing B.

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