![]() I mostly do it because “:w” is still muscle memory for saving even after all these years. Personally, I am one is those strange guys who uses the Vim extension in VSCode so I’m sure there are plenty more key combos I might use but don’t because I use the Vim approach instead. ![]() Ctrl-shift-t will reopen the last closed tab in Chrome. ![]() For example ctrl-space also works in Eclipse, Visual Studio, InteliJ, etc. It should be noted that almost every one if these Key combos work almost universally. To navigate by words without selecting, omit the shift. If it understands what type of file you have open it will use the right comment characters (e.g # for python)Ĭtrl-space: open the auto complete dialogĬtrl-tab to indent multiple highlighted linesĬtrl-shift-tab de-indent multiple selected linesĬtrl-shift-f: search all files in the workspaceĬtrl-shift-t: reopen the most recently closed editorĬtrl-shift-arrows: select by words instead of just characters. I’m not at a place where I can test these but from memory:Ĭtrl-/ to comment, ctrl-shift-t/ to uncomment. I’m not sure how to do it in Linux it Chromebooks. On Windows you can type alt and the character coffee but I find it easier to use the character map. Search for "union"v and you should find the symbol for MQTT. If you enter ctrl-cmd-space it will open a dialog where you can find emoji and symbols. You can type that combo in any other on the Mac and get the degree symbol. For Mac, press and hold the Shift and Option keys, then hit once on the 8 key. To use the Windows shortcut, press down the Alt key and type 0176 using the numeric keypad. That’s an OS X thing and not implemented by VSCode. The quickest shortcut to type the Degree Symbol is Alt + 0176 for Windows and Shift + Option + 8 for Mac.
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