Difference between revisions of "Using Visual Studio Code for ARM Development – Workspace and Project(s)"
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− | == Workspace and Project(s) == | + | __NOTOC__ |
− | Similar to other IDEs, Visual Studio Code is using the concept of a ‘'''workspace'''’. In simple words, a workspace is a collection of '''Folders''' open in the IDE. See https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/editor/workspaces for more details. In the most simple case a workspace just contains a folder which is the folder for the project. So all what we need is | + | |
+ | == VSCode - Workspace and Project(s) == | ||
+ | Similar to other IDEs, Visual Studio Code is using the concept of a ‘'''workspace'''’. In simple words, a workspace is a collection of '''Folders''' open in the IDE. See [https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/editor/workspaces workspaces] for more details. In the most simple case a workspace just contains a folder which is the folder for the project. So all what we need is to add a folder. | ||
[[image:vscode_add_folder.png|center]] | [[image:vscode_add_folder.png|center]] |
Revision as of 18:02, 28 March 2022
VSCode - Workspace and Project(s)
Similar to other IDEs, Visual Studio Code is using the concept of a ‘workspace’. In simple words, a workspace is a collection of Folders open in the IDE. See workspaces for more details. In the most simple case a workspace just contains a folder which is the folder for the project. So all what we need is to add a folder.
Use menu File > Add Folder to Workspace …
Browse to an existing new (empty) folder or simply create one from the dialog:
Add a new file: main.c
Implement the main function, then save it (CTRL+S)