You can also open the Settings editor from the Command Palette ( ⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P)) with Preferences: Open Settings or use the keyboard shortcut ( ⌘, (Windows, Linux Ctrl+,)). To open your user and workspace settings, use the following VS Code menu command: You can learn more in the What is a VS Code 'workspace'? article. You can also have more than one root folder in a VS Code workspace through a feature called Multi-root workspaces. Workspace settings as well as debugging and task configurations are stored at the root in a. Note: A VS Code 'workspace' is usually just your project root folder. Workspace settings are specific to a project and can be shared across developers on a project. Workspace settings override user settings. VS Code provides two different scopes for settings: Nearly every part of VS Code's editor, user interface, and functional behavior has options you can modify.
You can configure Visual Studio Code to your liking through its various settings. Configure IntelliSense for cross-compiling.