This is a sample project that supports the Visual Studio Codespaces quickstart documentation. It can be used for either the browser based quickstart or the Visual Studio Code based quickstart.
To make this file easier to read, press [ctrl
]+[shift
]+[V
].
This repository has been cloned into your VS Codespaces cloud-hosted environment. You're able to work with it like you would any local code. Some things to try:
- Press Ctrl+Shift+backtick to open a new terminal.
- From the terminal run
node --version
.Note: Node.js may or may not be installed on your local machine, yet you're able to use it because it's been automatically added to this environment!
- Type other Linux commands (
uname
,ls
, etc.) to interact with the underlying environment.
- Notice that
node_modules
are in the File Explorer.Note: VS Codespaces automatically performed an
npm install
so you can be instantly productive! - Open files to see syntax highlighting.
- Open
server.js
.Note: ESLint has been installed and configured in this environment. Press Ctrl+Shift+M (Cmd+Shift+M on macOS) to see the problems found by ESLint. Fix then by changing instances of
var
toconst
. - Change the message to "Hello {your name} from VS Codespaces!" (on line 17).
- Add a breakpoint on line 21.
- Press F5 to launch the app.
- Once the breakpoint is hit, try hovering over variables, examining locals, and more.
- Press F5 to continue running the app.
- Open the Remote Explorer activity pane.
- In the Codespace Details panel, click the Forward Port button that appears when you hover over Forwarded Ports (#)
- Enter port 3000 in the prompt.
- Accept the default name.
- Click the Copy Port URL button in the localhost:3000 title bar.
- Paste the URL into the browser of your choice.
Note: VS Codespaces has forwarded the environment's port 3000 to a location you can now access.
- View the cloud-hosted codespaces in the Codespaces panel on the Remote Explorer.
- Right click on My Quick Codespace and select Disconnect.