Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@idleberg
Last active December 21, 2024 02:05
Show Gist options
  • Save idleberg/bc65021a736e9139e3e31f7f2c761d5d to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Save idleberg/bc65021a736e9139e3e31f7f2c761d5d to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
“Open in Visual Studio Code” in macOS context-menu

Open in Visual Studio Code

  • Open Automator

  • Create a new document

  • Select Quick Action

  • Set “Service receives selected” to files or folders in any application

  • Add a Run Shell Script action

    • your default shell should already be selected, otherwise use /bin/zsh for macOS 10.15 (”Catalina”) or later
    • older versions of macOS use /bin/bash
    • if you're using something else, you probably know what to do 😉
  • Set the script action to the following

    for f in "$@"; do
      open -a 'Visual Studio Code' "$@"
    done
    
  • Set “Pass input” to as arguments

  • Save as Open in Visual Studio Code

Keyboard Shortcuts

You can assign a global shortcut to run the services we just created

  • Open “System Preferences”
  • Select “Keyboard” then the “Shortcuts” tab
  • In the left pane, click on “Services”
  • In the right pane, scroll to “Files and Folders”
  • Select “Open in Visual Studio Code” click “add shortcut”
  • Select a shortcut

Edit Context Menu items

You might want to rename or edit the items we just created

  • Activate Finder
  • Click on “Finder” in the Apple menu, select “Services” then “Services Preferences”
  • In the right pane, scroll to “Files and Folders” and scroll to the item you want to edit
  • Right click the item and select “Open in Visual Studio Code”
  • Edit and save

Alternatively, you can edit the workflow (e.g. ~/Library/Services/Open in Visual Studio Code.workflow) in your preferred text editor

@accidental-feature
Copy link

This would be easier and worked for me:

Open Automator

Create a new document

Select Quick Action

image

Best solution! Thanks a million!

@lony
Copy link

lony commented Nov 6, 2023

Screenshot from macOS Shortcut

I got help from a coworker and solved it. You have to select the quick action field.

@misaelabanto
Copy link

This would be easier and worked for me:

Open Automator

Create a new document

Select Quick Action

image

It worked, thank you!

@x-tropy
Copy link

x-tropy commented Feb 21, 2024

although there is probably very little practical impact, it would be better to replace, IMHO:

for f in "$@"; do
  open -a 'Visual Studio Code' "$@"
done

with

for f in "$@"; do
  open -a 'Visual Studio Code' "$f"
done

personally prefer $f without quotes, to open each folder as a seperate vscode window (rather than group them together as a workspace).

Those who prefer this way may try it out 😉

@icecreamsandwich
Copy link

This would be easier and worked for me:

Open Automator

Create a new document

Select Quick Action

image

thanks it worked 👍

@Minarcissist
Copy link

Lovely, thank you! <3

@SuvanCheng
Copy link

感谢您!!!
thx a lot!!!
@DaiZack

@yudopr
Copy link

yudopr commented May 31, 2024

Is there any way we can make it a shortcut and use it from the touchbar ??

you can customize the touch bar to include a quick action button image
once you tap it, the Open in Visual Studio Code option should be there.

@RafalSkolasinski
Copy link

DaiZack's solution seems easy and works well. Just to sing to the choir.

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment