

To review platform-specific setup instructions, see Setup. For example, on Windows, VS Code is installed under AppData\Local\Programs\Microsoft VS Code\bin. If this isn't the case, you can manually add the location to the Path environment variable ( $PATH on Linux). Windows and Linux installations should add the VS Code binaries location to your system path. Note: Users on macOS must first run a command ( Shell Command: Install 'code' command in PATH) to add VS Code executable to the PATH environment variable. To do this, from an open terminal or command prompt, navigate to your project folder and type code. Typically, you open VS Code within the context of a folder. You can launch VS Code from the command line to quickly open a file, folder, or project. You will see the version, usage example, and list of command line options. To get an overview of the VS Code command-line interface, open a terminal or command prompt and type code -help. If you are looking for how to run command-line tools inside VS Code, see the Integrated Terminal. You can open files, install extensions, change the display language, and output diagnostics through command-line options (switches). Visual Studio Code has a powerful command-line interface built-in that lets you control how you launch the editor.

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