

If you are interested in finding out how we solved it, please visit this dedicated blog post. If you are doing Java development using the Extension Pack for Java, we have good news for you – Visual Studio Code no longer generates those hidden “.project” metadata files in the project path when you import a new Java project! This is an issue that has been there for over three years, and our fix was delivered in November. In November, we have made several improvements in this area: Inner-loop dev experience directly impacts developer’s day-to-day productivity and this area will always be our top focus. This extension pack bundles the 5 extensions below explained in detail, and it will help you get started without digging too much.Hi everyone, welcome to the November edition of the Visual Studio Code Java update! In this end-of-year post, we are going to look at several new improvements related to fundamental Java development experience as well as our updates related to encoding issues. Java Extension Pack, by Microsoft ( overview - install) There is a set of extensions that are the minimum requirement to get core Java support in VS Code. But check this guide below for a laser-focused walkthrough in getting the most out of VS Code for Java development. You can also skip this guide completely, and simply go to the documentation page for Java in Visual Studio Code. The rest of this guide will assume you have at least Java 8 installed, though it works with Java 11 too. If you haven't already downloaded Visual Studio Code, install now. Here's the ultimate guide of 2019 for Java developers to use Visual Studio Code to develop, run, debug, and deploy their applications. Unsurprisingly, VS Code can do Java as well, and many Java champions and speakers have chosen it for their on-stage appearances and live demos.

Javascript, TypeScript, Go, Python, and other languages have a massive amount of developers coding through VS Code, in part thanks to the huge ecosystem of extensions that enhance and enrich the experience in VS Code, turning it into a super smart text editor with IDE-ish capabilities while remaining ludicrously fast and lightweight. Visual Studio Code has come a long way to become the preferred text editor of polyglot developers.
