When you open a CMake project folder, Visual Studio parses the CMakeLists.txt file and specifies a Windows target of x86-Debug. To target a remote Linux system, you'll change the project settings based on your Linux compiler. For example, if you are using GCC on Linux and compiling with debug info, you'll chose: Linux-GCC-Debug or Linux-GCC. C compiler README. Compile and execute C files from VSCode. Basic gcc compilation with -Wall flag. Basic gcc compilation and execution. Context menu added. AVX Optimizations and Performance: VisualStudio vs GCC. I have recently written some code using AVX function calls to perform a convolution in my software. I have compiled and run this code on two platforms with the following compilation settings of note: 1. Windows 7 w/ Visual Studio.
In this tutorial, you configure Visual Studio Code to use the GCC C++ compiler (g++) and GDB debugger from mingw-w64 to create programs that run on Windows.
After configuring VS Code, you will compile and debug a simple Hello World program in VS Code. This tutorial does not teach you about GCC, GDB, Mingw-w64, or the C++ language. For those subjects, there are many good resources available on the Web.
If you have any problems, feel free to file an issue for this tutorial in the VS Code documentation repository.
Prerequisites
To successfully complete this tutorial, you must do the following steps:
Install Visual Studio Code.
Install the C/C++ extension for VS Code. You can install the C/C++ extension by searching for 'c++' in the Extensions view (⇧⌘X (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+X)).
Install Mingw-w64 via the SourceForge website. Click Mingw-w64 to download the Windows Mingw-w64 installer.
- Run the installer.
- For Architecture select x86_64 and then select Next.
- On the Installation Folder page, use the default installation folder. Copy the location as you will need it later.
- Select Next to start the installation.
Add the path to your Mingw-w64
bin
folder to the WindowsPATH
environment variable by using the following steps:- In the Windows search bar, type 'settings' to open your Windows Settings.
- Search for Edit environment variables for your account.
- Choose the
Path
variable and then select Edit. - Select New and add the Mingw-w64 destination folder path to the system path. The exact path depends on which version of Mingw-w64 you have installed and where you installed it. If you used the settings above to install Mingw-w64, then add this to the path:
C:Program Filesmingw-w64x86_64-8.1.0-posix-seh-rt_v6-rev0mingw64bin
. - Select OK to save the updated PATH. You will need to reopen any console windows for the new PATH location to be available.
Check your MinGW installation
To check that your Mingw-w64 tools are correctly installed and available, open a new Command Prompt and type:
If you don't see the expected output or g++
or gdb
is not a recognized command, check your installation (Windows Control Panel > Programs) and make sure your PATH entry matches the Mingw-w64 binary location where the compilers are located.
Create Hello World
From a Windows command prompt, create an empty folder called projects
where you can place all your VS Code projects. Then create a sub-folder called helloworld
, navigate into it, and open VS Code in that folder by entering the following commands:
The 'code .' command opens VS Code in the current working folder, which becomes your 'workspace'. As you go through the tutorial, you will see three files created in a .vscode
folder in the workspace:
tasks.json
(build instructions)launch.json
(debugger settings)c_cpp_properties.json
(compiler path and IntelliSense settings)
Add a source code file
In the File Explorer title bar, select the New File button and name the file helloworld.cpp
.
Add hello world source code
Now paste in this source code:
Now press ⌘S (Windows, Linux Ctrl+S) to save the file. Notice how the file you just added appears in the File Explorer view (⇧⌘E (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+E)) in the side bar of VS Code:
You can also enable Auto Save to automatically save your file changes, by checking Auto Save in the main File menu.
The Activity Bar on the far left lets you open different views such as Search, Source Control, and Run. You'll look at the Run view later in this tutorial. You can find out more about the other views in the VS Code User Interface documentation.
Note: When you save or open a C++ file, you may see a notification from the C/C++ extension about the availability of an Insiders version, which lets you test new features and fixes. You can ignore this notification by selecting the X
(Clear Notification).
Explore IntelliSense
In your new helloworld.cpp
file, hover over vector
or string
to see type information. After the declaration of the msg
variable, start typing msg.
as you would when calling a member function. You should immediately see a completion list that shows all the member functions, and a window that shows the type information for the msg
object:
You can press the Tab key to insert the selected member; then, when you add the opening parenthesis, you will see information about any arguments that the function requires.
Build helloworld.cpp
Next, you'll create a tasks.json
file to tell VS Code how to build (compile) the program. This task will invoke the g++ compiler to create an executable file based on the source code.
From the main menu, choose Terminal > Configure Default Build Task. In the dropdown, which will display a tasks dropdown listing various predefined build tasks for C++ compilers. Choose g++.exe build active file, which will build the file that is currently displayed (active) in the editor.
This will create a tasks.json
file in a .vscode
folder and open it in the editor.
Your new tasks.json
file should look similar to the JSON below:
The command
setting specifies the program to run; in this case that is g++. The args
array specifies the command-line arguments that will be passed to g++. These arguments must be specified in the order expected by the compiler. This task tells g++ to take the active file (${file}
), compile it, and create an executable file in the current directory (${fileDirname}
) with the same name as the active file but with the .exe
extension (${fileBasenameNoExtension}.exe
), resulting in helloworld.exe
for our example.
Note: You can learn more about tasks.json
variables in the variables reference.
The label
value is what you will see in the tasks list; you can name this whatever you like.
The 'isDefault': true
value in the group
object specifies that this task will be run when you press ⇧⌘B (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+B). This property is for convenience only; if you set it to false, you can still run it from the Terminal menu with Tasks: Run Build Task.
Running the build
Visual Studio Compiler Gcc
Go back to
helloworld.cpp
. Your task builds the active file and you want to buildhelloworld.cpp
.To run the build task defined in
tasks.json
, press ⇧⌘B (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+B) or from the Terminal main menu choose Run Build Task.When the task starts, you should see the Integrated Terminal panel appear below the source code editor. After the task completes, the terminal shows output from the compiler that indicates whether the build succeeded or failed. For a successful g++ build, the output looks something like this:
Create a new terminal using the + button and you'll have a new terminal with the
helloworld
folder as the working directory. Rundir
and you should now see the executablehelloworld.exe
.You can run
helloworld
in the terminal by typinghelloworld.exe
(or.helloworld.exe
if you use a PowerShell terminal).
Note: You might need to press Enter a couple of times initially to see the PowerShell prompt in the terminal. This issue should be fixed in a future release of Windows.
Modifying tasks.json
You can modify your tasks.json
to build multiple C++ files by using an argument like '${workspaceFolder}*.cpp'
instead of ${file}
. This will build all .cpp
files in your current folder. You can also modify the output filename by replacing '${fileDirname}${fileBasenameNoExtension}.exe'
with a hard-coded filename (for example '${workspaceFolder}myProgram.exe'
).
Debug helloworld.cpp
Next, you'll create a launch.json
file to configure VS Code to launch the GDB debugger when you press F5 to debug the program.
- From the main menu, choose Run > Add Configuration... and then choose C++ (GDB/LLDB).
- You'll then see a dropdown for various predefined debugging configurations. Choose g++.exe build and debug active file.
VS Code creates a launch.json
file, opens it in the editor, and builds and runs 'helloworld'.
The program
setting specifies the program you want to debug. Here it is set to the active file folder ${fileDirname}
and active filename with the .exe
extension ${fileBasenameNoExtension}.exe
, which if helloworld.cpp
is the active file will be helloworld.exe
.
By default, the C++ extension won't add any breakpoints to your source code and the stopAtEntry
value is set to false
.
Change the stopAtEntry
value to true
to cause the debugger to stop on the main
method when you start debugging.
Note: The preLaunchTask
setting is used to specify task to be executed before launch. Make sure it is consistent with the tasks.json
file label
setting.
Start a debugging session
- Go back to
helloworld.cpp
so that it is the active file. - Press F5 or from the main menu choose Run > Start Debugging. Before you start stepping through the source code, let's take a moment to notice several changes in the user interface:
The Integrated Terminal appears at the bottom of the source code editor. In the Debug Output tab, you see output that indicates the debugger is up and running.
The editor highlights the first statement in the
main
method. This is a breakpoint that the C++ extension automatically sets for you:The Run view on the left shows debugging information. You'll see an example later in the tutorial.
At the top of the code editor, a debugging control panel appears. You can move this around the screen by grabbing the dots on the left side.
Step through the code
Now you're ready to start stepping through the code.
Click or press the Step over icon in the debugging control panel.
This will advance program execution to the first line of the for loop, and skip over all the internal function calls within the
vector
andstring
classes that are invoked when themsg
variable is created and initialized. Notice the change in the Variables window on the left.In this case, the errors are expected because, although the variable names for the loop are now visible to the debugger, the statement has not executed yet, so there is nothing to read at this point. The contents of
msg
are visible, however, because that statement has completed.Press Step over again to advance to the next statement in this program (skipping over all the internal code that is executed to initialize the loop). Now, the Variables window shows information about the loop variables.
Press Step over again to execute the
cout
statement. (Note that as of the March 2019 release, the C++ extension does not print any output to the Debug Console until the loop exits.)If you like, you can keep pressing Step over until all the words in the vector have been printed to the console. But if you are curious, try pressing the Step Into button to step through source code in the C++ standard library!
To return to your own code, one way is to keep pressing Step over. Another way is to set a breakpoint in your code by switching to the
helloworld.cpp
tab in the code editor, putting the insertion point somewhere on thecout
statement inside the loop, and pressing F9. A red dot appears in the gutter on the left to indicate that a breakpoint has been set on this line.Then press F5 to start execution from the current line in the standard library header. Execution will break on
cout
. If you like, you can press F9 again to toggle off the breakpoint.When the loop has completed, you can see the output in the Integrated Terminal, along with some other diagnostic information that is output by GDB.
Set a watch
Sometimes you might want to keep track of the value of a variable as your program executes. You can do this by setting a watch on the variable.
Place the insertion point inside the loop. In the Watch window, click the plus sign and in the text box, type
word
, which is the name of the loop variable. Now view the Watch window as you step through the loop.Add another watch by adding this statement before the loop:
int i = 0;
. Then, inside the loop, add this statement:++i;
. Now add a watch fori
as you did in the previous step.To quickly view the value of any variable while execution is paused on a breakpoint, you can hover over it with the mouse pointer.
C/C++ configurations
If you want more control over the C/C++ extension, you can create a c_cpp_properties.json
file, which will allow you to change settings such as the path to the compiler, include paths, C++ standard (default is C++17), and more.
You can view the C/C++ configuration UI by running the command C/C++: Edit Configurations (UI) from the Command Palette (⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P)).
This opens the C/C++ Configurations page. When you make changes here, VS Code writes them to a file called c_cpp_properties.json
in the .vscode
folder.
Here, we've changed the Configuration name to GCC, set the Compiler path dropdown to the g++ compiler, and the IntelliSense mode to match the compiler (gcc-x64)
Visual Studio Code places these settings in .vscodec_cpp_properties.json
. If you open that file directly, it should look something like this:
You only need to add to the Include path array setting if your program includes header files that are not in your workspace or in the standard library path.
Compiler path
The extension uses the compilerPath
setting to infer the path to the C++ standard library header files. When the extension knows where to find those files, it can provide features like smart completions and Go to Definition navigation.
The C/C++ extension attempts to populate compilerPath
with the default compiler location based on what it finds on your system. The extension looks in several common compiler locations.
The compilerPath
search order is:
- First check for the Microsoft Visual C++ compiler
- Then look for g++ on Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL)
- Then g++ for Mingw-w64.
If you have Visual Studio or WSL installed, you may need to change compilerPath
to match the preferred compiler for your project. For example, if you installed Mingw-w64 version 8.1.0 using the i686 architecture, Win32 threading, and sjlj exception handling install options, the path would look like this: C:Program Files (x86)mingw-w64i686-8.1.0-win32-sjlj-rt_v6-rev0mingw64bing++.exe
.
Next steps
- Explore the VS Code User Guide.
- Review the Overview of the C++ extension.
- Create a new workspace, copy your
.vscode
JSON files to it, adjust the necessary settings for the new workspace path, program name, and so on, and start coding!
In this tutorial, you will configure Visual Studio Code to use the GCC C++ compiler (g++) and GDB debugger on Linux. GCC stands for GNU Compiler Collection; GDB is the GNU debugger.
After configuring VS Code, you will compile and debug a simple C++ program in VS Code. This tutorial does not teach you GCC, GDB, Ubuntu or the C++ language. For those subjects, there are many good resources available on the Web.
If you have trouble, feel free to file an issue for this tutorial in the VS Code documentation repository.
Prerequisites
To successfully complete this tutorial, you must do the following:
Install Visual Studio Code.
Install the C++ extension for VS Code. You can install the C/C++ extension by searching for 'c++' in the Extensions view (⇧⌘X (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+X)).
Ensure GCC is installed
Although you'll use VS Code to edit your source code, you'll compile the source code on Linux using the g++ compiler. You'll also use GDB to debug. These tools are not installed by default on Ubuntu, so you have to install them. Fortunately, that's easy.
First, check to see whether GCC is already installed. To verify whether it is, open a Terminal window and enter the following command:
If GCC isn't installed, run the following command from the terminal window to update the Ubuntu package lists. An out-of-date Linux distribution can sometimes interfere with attempts to install new packages.
Next install the GNU compiler tools and the GDB debugger with this command:
Create Hello World
From the terminal window, create an empty folder called projects
to store your VS Code projects. Then create a subfolder called helloworld
, navigate into it, and open VS Code in that folder by entering the following commands:
The code .
command opens VS Code in the current working folder, which becomes your 'workspace'. As you go through the tutorial, you will create three files in a .vscode
folder in the workspace:
tasks.json
(compiler build settings)launch.json
(debugger settings)c_cpp_properties.json
(compiler path and IntelliSense settings)
Add hello world source code file
In the File Explorer title bar, select New File and name the file helloworld.cpp
.
Paste in the following source code:
Now press ⌘S (Windows, Linux Ctrl+S) to save the file. Notice that your files are listed in the File Explorer view (⇧⌘E (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+E)) in the side bar of VS Code:
You can also enable Auto Save to automatically save your file changes, by checking Auto Save in the main File menu.
The Activity Bar on the edge of Visual Studio Code lets you open different views such as Search, Source Control, and Run. You'll look at the Run view later in this tutorial. You can find out more about the other views in the VS Code User Interface documentation.
Note: When you save or open a C++ file, you may see a notification from the C/C++ extension about the availability of an Insiders version, which lets you test new features and fixes. You can ignore this notification by selecting the X
(Clear Notification).
Explore IntelliSense
In the helloworld.cpp
file, hover over vector
or string
to see type information. After the declaration of the msg
variable, start typing msg.
as you would when calling a member function. You should immediately see a completion list that shows all the member functions, and a window that shows the type information for the msg
object:
You can press the Tab key to insert the selected member. Then, when you add the opening parenthesis, you'll see information about arguments that the function requires.
Build helloworld.cpp
Next, you'll create a tasks.json
file to tell VS Code how to build (compile) the program. This task will invoke the g++ compiler to create an executable file from the source code.
It's important to have helloworld.cpp
open in the editor because the next step uses the active file in the editor for context to create the build task in the next step.
From the main menu, choose Terminal > Configure Default Build Task. A dropdown appears showing various predefined build tasks for C++ compilers. Choose C/C++: g++ build active file.
This will create a tasks.json
file in a .vscode
folder and open it in the editor.
Visual Studio Gcc
Your new tasks.json
file should look similar to the JSON below:
Note: You can learn more about tasks.json
variables in the variables reference.
The command
setting specifies the program to run; in this case that is g++. The args
array specifies the command-line arguments that will be passed to g++. These arguments must be specified in the order expected by the compiler.
This task tells g++ to take the active file (${file}
), compile it, and create an executable file in the current directory (${fileDirname}
) with the same name as the active file but without an extension (${fileBasenameNoExtension}
), resulting in helloworld
for our example.
The label
value is what you will see in the tasks list; you can name this whatever you like.
The 'isDefault': true
value in the group
object specifies that this task will be run when you press ⇧⌘B (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+B). This property is for convenience only; if you set it to false, you can still run it from the Terminal menu with Tasks: Run Build Task.
Running the build
Go back to
helloworld.cpp
. Your task builds the active file and you want to buildhelloworld.cpp
.To run the build task defined in
tasks.json
, press ⇧⌘B (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+B) or from the Terminal main menu choose Run Build Task.When the task starts, you should see the Integrated Terminal panel appear below the source code editor. After the task completes, the terminal shows output from the compiler that indicates whether the build succeeded or failed. For a successful g++ build, the output looks something like this:
Create a new terminal using the + button and you'll have a terminal running your default shell with the
helloworld
folder as the working directory. Runls
and you should now see the executablehelloworld
(no file extension).You can run
helloworld
in the terminal by typing./helloworld
.
Modifying tasks.json
You can modify your tasks.json
to build multiple C++ files by using an argument like '${workspaceFolder}/*.cpp'
instead of ${file}
. You can also modify the output filename by replacing '${fileDirname}/${fileBasenameNoExtension}'
with a hard-coded filename (for example 'helloworld.out').
Debug helloworld.cpp
Next, you'll create a launch.json
file to configure VS Code to launch the GDB debugger when you press F5 to debug the program.
From the main menu, choose Run > Add Configuration... and then choose C++ (GDB/LLDB).
You'll then see a dropdown for various predefined debugging configurations. Choose g++ build and debug active file.
VS Code creates a launch.json
file, opens it in the editor, and builds and runs 'helloworld'.
In the JSON above, program
specifies the program you want to debug. Here it is set to the active file folder ${fileDirname}
and active filename without an extension ${fileBasenameNoExtension}
, which if helloworld.cpp
is the active file will be helloworld
.
By default, the C++ extension won't add any breakpoints to your source code and the stopAtEntry
value is set to false
.
Change the stopAtEntry
value to true
to cause the debugger to stop on the main
method when you start debugging.
Start a debugging session
- Go back to
helloworld.cpp
so that it is the active file. - Press F5 or from the main menu choose Run > Start Debugging. Before you start stepping through the code, let's take a moment to notice several changes in the user interface:
The Integrated Terminal appears at the bottom of the source code editor. In the Debug Output tab, you see output that indicates the debugger is up and running.
The editor highlights the first statement in the
main
method. This is a breakpoint that the C++ extension automatically sets for you:The Run view on the left shows debugging information. You'll see an example later in the tutorial.
At the top of the code editor, a debugging control panel appears. You can move this around the screen by grabbing the dots on the left side.
Step through the code
Now you're ready to start stepping through the code.
Click or press the Step over icon in the debugging control panel.
This will advance program execution to the first line of the for loop, and skip over all the internal function calls within the
vector
andstring
classes that are invoked when themsg
variable is created and initialized. Notice the change in the Variables window on the side.Press Step over again to advance to the next statement in this program (skipping over all the internal code that is executed to initialize the loop). Now, the Variables window shows information about the loop variables.
Press Step over again to execute the
cout
statement. (Note that as of the March 2019 release, the C++ extension does not print any output to the Debug Console until the last cout executes.)If you like, you can keep pressing Step over until all the words in the vector have been printed to the console. But if you are curious, try pressing the Step Into button to step through source code in the C++ standard library!
To return to your own code, one way is to keep pressing Step over. Another way is to set a breakpoint in your code by switching to the
helloworld.cpp
tab in the code editor, putting the insertion point somewhere on thecout
statement inside the loop, and pressing F9. A red dot appears in the gutter on the left to indicate that a breakpoint has been set on this line.Then press F5 to start execution from the current line in the standard library header. Execution will break on
cout
. If you like, you can press F9 again to toggle off the breakpoint.When the loop has completed, you can see the output in the Debug Console tab of the integrated terminal, along with some other diagnostic information that is output by GDB.
Set a watch
To keep track of the value of a variable as your program executes, set a watch on the variable.
Place the insertion point inside the loop. In the Watch window, click the plus sign and in the text box, type
word
, which is the name of the loop variable. Now view the Watch window as you step through the loop.To quickly view the value of any variable while execution is paused on a breakpoint, you can hover over it with the mouse pointer.
C/C++ configurations
If you want more control over the C/C++ extension, you can create a c_cpp_properties.json
file, which will allow you to change settings such as the path to the compiler, include paths, C++ standard (default is C++17), and more.
You can view the C/C++ configuration UI by running the command C/C++: Edit Configurations (UI) from the Command Palette (⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P)).
This opens the C/C++ Configurations page. When you make changes here, VS Code writes them to a file called c_cpp_properties.json
in the .vscode
folder.
You only need to modify the Include path setting if your program includes header files that are not in your workspace or in the standard library path.
Visual Studio Code places these settings in .vscode/c_cpp_properties.json
. If you open that file directly, it should look something like this:
Reusing your C++ configuration
VS Code is now configured to use gcc on Linux. The configuration applies to the current workspace. To reuse the configuration, just copy the JSON files to a .vscode
folder in a new project folder (workspace) and change the names of the source file(s) and executable as needed.
Troubleshooting
Compiler and linking errors
The most common cause of errors (such as undefined _main
, or attempting to link with file built for unknown-unsupported file format
, and so on) occurs when helloworld.cpp
is not the active file when you start a build or start debugging. This is because the compiler is trying to compile something that isn't source code, like your launch.json
, tasks.json
, or c_cpp_properties.json
file.
Next steps
- Explore the VS Code User Guide.
- Review the Overview of the C++ extension.
- Create a new workspace, copy your .json files to it, adjust the necessary settings for the new workspace path, program name, and so on, and start coding!