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VSCode Guide

  1. Install VSCode.

  2. If you haven't already, install gulp-cli globally, with npm install -g gulp-cli from a bash prompt. This does not require administrative rights, and places a gulp shim into your path that will invoke a copy of gulp from the local project folder. This is needed for VSCode's build tasks to work with CesiumJS.

  3. Click File -> Open Folder... and open the CesiumJS root folder.

Shell Integration (optional)

VSCode has an integrated shell, exposed on Windows by pressing CTRL-` (CTRL-backtick). You may want to switch this to be a git bash shell by default. If so, click File -> Preferences -> Settings... and enter integrated.shell into the search box. Choose the appropriate key for your operating system, for example terminal.integrated.shell.windows for Windows, and click the edit icon. The default setting will be copied to your user settings. The default for Windows is "C:\\Windows\\system32\\cmd.exe". Change this to point to your git bash install. For example:

{
  "terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Program Files\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe"
}

Note that on Windows, the git bash desktop icon points at a different exe file, one that forces a separate (non-integrated) window to pop open outside of VSCode. Make sure you are pointed at the correct exe as shown above, with Git 2.0.0 or higher installed, to get the correct integrated shell behavior.

VSCode Extensions (mostly optional)

Click on the extensions icon, or press CTRL-SHIFT-X to see the list of installed VSCode extensions. While we don't officially endorse any particular 3rd-party extension, there are some that appear to be quite useful to CesiumJS. Just enter the desired extension name in the search box and click install. You will need to restart VSCode after you are done installing extensions.

  • eslint by Dirk Baeumer -- This extension picks up on CesiumJS's own eslint settings, and will warn of any violations. The CesiumJS main repository should pass eslint using the CesiumJS eslint settings with no warnings and no errors. Proposed contributions to CesiumJS that introduce eslint warnings will need to be corrected before they are accepted.

  • Shader languages support for VS Code by slevesque -- This extension provides syntax highlighting for CesiumJS's shader code.

  • glTF Extension for VS Code by CesiumJS.org -- This extension adds features for previewing and editing 3D models in glTF files.

VSCode Tasks and Files

You can launch any of CesiumJS's npm tasks from within VSCode by pressing CTRL-P and typing task (with a trailing space). Autocomplete will offer the list of npm tasks for you to run. The first time you do this, allow a moment for it to read the available tasks from the gulpfile.

You can also jump to any source file with the same CTRL-P keypress followed by the name of the file.

Building CesiumJS

CesiumJS has a number of GLSL shaders and auto-generated files that must be built before CesiumJS can be used. The simplest way in VSCode is to type CTRL-P task build to trigger a single build.

You can also start the build watcher with CTRL-P task build-watch. This leaves a watcher running until you exit VSCode, that will automatically update any shaders or auto-generated files to reflect changes to CesiumJS as you save them.

Keep in mind that build-watch will quietly terminate when you quit VSCode, so should be restarted manually on next launch.

Debugging CesiumJS

To debug CesiumJS using the VSCode Chrome debugger, run the "Launch Server" configuration. If the server was already started in the terminal using npm start, use the "Launch in Chrome" configuration.