View in Browser If you like viewing your HTML in a browser frequently for feedback as you code, this Visual Studio code extension will help you do it. It renders HTML files in your system’s default browser. Download Visual Studio Code for macOS. Open the browser's download list and locate the downloaded archive. Select the 'magnifying glass' icon to open the archive in Finder. Drag Visual Studio Code.app to the Applications folder, making it available in the macOS Launchpad. IOS Web Debugging on Windows and Mac. August 24, 2016 by Kenneth Auchenberg. The iOS Web debugger has been deprecated and we now recommend that you use the RemoteDebug iOS WebKit Adapter together with Visual Studio Code.
- How To Open Browser Or Run Program Directly From Visual ...
- Visual Studio Open Web Browser
- Visual Studio In Browser
- Cached
- Visual Studio Set Browser
- Debug ASP.NET Core Blazor WebAssembly | Microsoft Docs
- Visual Studio Code Browser Preview
For information about keyboard accessibility, see How to: Use Keyboard Navigation.
You can access a variety of commands in Visual Studio for Mac by using the appropriate keyboard shortcut. This document lists the default shortcuts for the Visual Studio for Mac key binding scheme. For more information about how to change the key binding scheme, see Customizing the IDE. You can also customize shortcuts for a command using the Visual Studio for Mac > Preferences menu item and choosing Environment > Key Bindings in the Preferences window.
Tip
The keyboard shortcuts displayed in this document, and the key binding preferences in Visual Studio for Mac, are presented using the symbols commonly used in macOS. If you are unsure of a symbol, review the macOS key symbols loopkup table.
Downloadable quick ref pdfs
We have compiled the most used, and most useful, keyboard shortcuts into a downloadable pdf file. We have two versions,one that shows shortcuts for Visual Studio for Mac, and a version that shows Visual Studio shorts side-by-side for usersthat have prior experience with Visual Studio when using Windows.
Code Navigation
Commands | Keyboard shortcuts |
---|---|
Find References | ⇧⌘R, F12 |
Go to Declaration | ⌘D, F12 |
Next Error | ⌥⇧⇟, ⇧⌘F12 |
Next Issue in File | ⌥⇟ |
Previous Error | ⌥⇧⇞ |
Previous Issue in File | ⌥⇞ |
Debug
Commands | Keyboard shortcuts |
---|---|
Enable or Disable Breakpoint | ⌥⌘/, ⌘F9 |
Pause | ⌥⌘P, ⌥⌘L5 |
Remove All Breakpoints | ⇧⌘F9 |
Run To Cursor | ⌘F10 |
Set Next Statement | ⇧⌘F10 |
Show Next Statement | ⌥* |
Step Into | ⇧⌘I, ⌘F11 |
Step Out | ⇧⌘U, ⇧⌘F11 |
Step Over | ⇧⌘O, F10 |
Toggle Breakpoint | ⌘, F9 |
View Breakpoints | ⌥⌘B |
Designer
Commands | Keyboard shortcuts |
---|---|
Switch between related files | ⌃⌘↑ |
Edit
Commands | Keyboard shortcuts |
---|---|
Constraint Editing Mode | ⌘E |
Copy | ⌘C |
Cut | ⌘X |
Delete | ⌘⌫ |
Format Document | ⌃I |
Indent Selection | ⌘] |
Paste | ⌘V |
Preferences | ⌘, |
Redo | ⇧⌘Z |
Rename | ⌘R, F2 |
Select All | ⌘A |
Show Code Generation | ⌘I |
Toggle All Folds | ⌥⇧⌘↑ |
Toggle Definitions | ⌥⇧⌘↓ |
Toggle Fold | ⌥⇧⌘← |
Toggle Line Comment(s) | ⌘/ |
Undo | ⌘Z |
Unindent Selection | ⌘[ |
Update Frame from Constraints | ⇧⌘R |
F# Integration
Commands | Keyboard shortcuts |
---|---|
Clear F# Interactive | ⌃⌥C |
F# Interactive | ⌃⌥F |
Restart F# Interactive | ⌃⌥R |
Send line to F# Interactive | ⌃⌥L |
Send references to F# Interactive | ⌃⌥P |
Send selection to F# Interactive | ⌃⏎ |
File
Commands | Keyboard shortcuts |
---|---|
Close All | ⇧⌘W |
Close File | ⌘W |
Close Workspace | ⌥⌘W |
New File | ⌘N |
New Solution | ⇧⌘N |
Open | ⌘O |
⌘P | |
Quit | ⌘Q |
Revert | ⌘U |
Save | ⌘S |
Save All | ⇧⌘S |
Help
Commands | Keyboard shortcuts |
---|---|
API Documentation | ⌥⌘? |
Unity API Reference | ⌘' |
Other
Commands | Keyboard shortcuts |
---|---|
Implement Unity Messages | ⇧⌘M |
Inspect | ⌥⌘I |
Project
Commands | Keyboard shortcuts |
---|---|
Add Files | ⌥⌘A |
Build | ⌘K, ⇧F6 |
Build All | ⌘B, F6 |
Clean | ⇧⌘K |
Rebuild | ⌃⌘K |
Rebuild All | ⌃⌘B |
Start Debugging | ⌘⏎, F5 |
Start Without Debugging | ⌥⌘⏎, ⌃F5 |
Stop | ⇧⌘⏎, ⇧F5 |
Refactoring
Commands | Keyboard shortcuts |
---|---|
Import Symbol | ⌃⌥␣ |
Quick Fix | ⌥⏎ |
Search
Commands | Keyboard shortcuts |
---|---|
Command | ⇧⌘P |
Find in Files | ⇧⌘F |
Find Next | ⌘G, F3 |
Find Next Like Selection | ⌘E, ⌘F3 |
Find Previous | ⇧⌘G, ⇧F3 |
Find Previous Like Selection | ⇧⌘F3 |
Find | ⌘F |
Go to File | ⇧⌘D |
Go to Line | ⌘L |
Go to Type | ⇧⌘T |
Navigate To | ⌘. |
Replace in Files | ⌥⇧⌘F |
Replace | ⌥⌘F |
How To Open Browser Or Run Program Directly From Visual ...
Text Editor
Commands | Keyboard shortcuts |
---|---|
Complete Word | ⌃␣ |
Delete left character | ⌃H |
Delete next subword | ⌃⌦ |
Delete next word | ⌥⌦ |
Delete previous subword | ⌃⌫ |
Delete previous word | ⌥⌫ |
Delete right character | ⌃D |
Delete to end of line | ⌃K |
Dynamic abbrev | ⌃/ |
Expand selection | ⌥⇧↓ |
Expand selection | ⌥⇧↑ |
Expand selection to document end | ⇧⌘↓, ⇧⌘↘ |
Expand selection to document start | ⇧⌘↑, ⇧⌘↖ |
Expand selection to line end | ⇧↘, ⇧⌘→ |
Expand selection to line start | ⇧↖, ⇧⌘← |
Expand selection to next line | ⇧↓ |
Expand selection to next word | ⌥⇧→ |
Expand selection to page down | ⇧⇟ |
Expand selection to page up | ⇧⇞ |
Expand selection to previous line | ⇧↑ |
Expand selection to previous word | ⌥⇧← |
Expand selection to the left | ⇧← |
Expand selection to the right | ⇧→ |
Find caret | ⌘| |
Go left one character | ⌃B |
Go right one character | ⌃F |
Go to beginning of document | ⌘↑ |
Go to beginning of line | ⌘←, ⌃A |
Go to end of document | ⌘↓ |
Go to end of line | ⌘→, ⌃E |
Go to Matching Brace | ⇧⌘ |
Go to next line | ⌃N |
Go to next word | ⌥→ |
Go to previous line | ⌃P |
Go to previous word | ⌥← |
Insert line break after the caret | ⌃O |
Move caret to EOL and insert new line | ⇧⏎ |
Move the line or highlighted selection down | ⌥↓ |
Move the line or highlighted selection up | ⌥↑ |
Move to next usage | ⌃⌥⌘↓ |
Move to prev usage | ⌃⌥⌘↑ |
Show Parameter List | ⌃⇧␣ |
Show quick info | ⌘F1 |
Show Scopes | ⌥⇧⌘P |
Transpose characters | ⌃T |
Wrap with <div> | ⌥⇧W |
View
Commands | Keyboard shortcuts |
---|---|
Center and Focus Document | ⌃L |
Focus Document | F7 |
Full Screen | ⌃⌘F |
Move to Next Notebook | ⌥⌘→ |
Move to Previous Notebook | ⌥⌘← |
Navigate Back | ⌃⌘← |
Navigate Forward | ⌃⌘→ |
Normal Size | ⌘0 |
One Editor Column | ⌥⌘1 |
Show Next | ⌥⌘↓, F8 |
Show Previous | ⌥⌘↑, ⇧F8 |
Two Editor Columns | ⌥⌘2 |
Zoom In | ⌘+, ⌘= |
Zoom Out | ⌘-, ⌘_ |
Window
Commands | Keyboard shortcuts |
---|---|
Activate 1 | ⌘1 |
Activate 2 | ⌘2 |
Activate 3 | ⌘3 |
Activate 4 | ⌘4 |
Activate 5 | ⌘5 |
Activate 6 | ⌘6 |
Activate 7 | ⌘7 |
Activate 8 | ⌘8 |
Activate 9 | ⌘9 |
Hide Others | ⌥⌘H |
Hide Visual Studio | ⌘H |
Minimize | ⌘M |
Next Document | ⌘}, ⌘F6 |
Previous Document | ⌘{, ⇧⌘F6 |
Switch to next document | ⌃⇥ |
Switch to next tool window | ⌃⌥⇥ |
Switch to previous document | ⌃⇧⇥ |
Switch to previous tool window | ⌃⌥⇧⇥ |
macOS key symbols lookup
Symbol | Key |
---|---|
⌘ | Command (cmd) |
⌥ | Option (alt) |
⇧ | Shift |
⌃ | Control (ctrl) |
⇞ | Page Up (Pg Up) |
⇟ | Page Down (Pg Dn) |
⌫ | Delete (Backspace) |
⌦ | Forward Delete |
⏎ | Return |
←→↑↓ | Arrow Keys |
↖ | Home |
↘ | End |
␣ | Space Bar |
⇥ | Tab |
See also
-->Blazor WebAssembly apps can be debugged using the browser dev tools in Chromium-based browsers (Edge/Chrome). You can also debug your app using the following integrated development environments (IDEs):
- Visual Studio
- Visual Studio for Mac
- Visual Studio Code
Available scenarios include:
- Set and remove breakpoints.
- Run the app with debugging support in IDEs.
- Single-step through the code.
- Resume code execution with a keyboard shortcut in IDEs.
- In the Locals window, observe the values of local variables.
- See the call stack, including call chains between JavaScript and .NET.
For now, you can't:
- Break on unhandled exceptions.
- Hit breakpoints during app startup before the debug proxy is running. This includes breakpoints in
Program.Main
(Program.cs
) and breakpoints in theOnInitialized{Async}
lifecycle methods of components that are loaded by the first page requested from the app. - Debug in non-local scenarios (for example, Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) or Visual Studio Codespaces).
- Automatically rebuild the backend
*Server*
app of a hosted Blazor WebAssembly solution during debugging, for example by running the app withdotnet watch run
.
Prerequisites
Debugging requires either of the following browsers:
- Google Chrome (version 70 or later) (default)
- Microsoft Edge (version 80 or later)
Ensure that firewalls or proxies don't block communication with the debug proxy (NodeJS
process). For more information, see the Firewall configuration section.
Visual Studio Code users require the following extensions:
- Blazor WASM Debugging Extension (when using the C# for Visual Studio Code Extension version 1.23.9 or later)
After opening a project in VS Code, you may receive a notification that additional setup is required to enable debugging. If requested, install the required extensions from the Visual Studio Marketplace. To inspect the installed extensions, open View > Extensions from the menu bar or select the Extensions icon in the Activity sidebar.
Visual Studio for Mac requires version 8.8 (build 1532) or later:
- Install the latest release of Visual Studio for Mac by selecting the Download Visual Studio for Mac button at Microsoft: Visual Studio for Mac.
- Select the Preview channel from within Visual Studio. For more information, see Install a preview version of Visual Studio for Mac.
Note
Apple Safari on macOS isn't currently supported.
Enable debugging
To enable debugging for an existing Blazor WebAssembly app, update the launchSettings.json
file in the startup project to include the following inspectUri
property in each launch profile:
Once updated, the launchSettings.json
file should look similar to the following example:
The inspectUri
property:
- Enables the IDE to detect that the app is a Blazor WebAssembly app.
- Instructs the script debugging infrastructure to connect to the browser through Blazor's debugging proxy.
The placeholder values for the WebSockets protocol (wsProtocol
), host (url.hostname
), port (url.port
), and inspector URI on the launched browser (browserInspectUri
) are provided by the framework.
To debug a Blazor WebAssembly app in Visual Studio:
Create a new hosted Blazor WebAssembly solution.
Press F5 to run the app in the debugger.
Note
Start Without Debugging (Ctrl+F5) isn't supported. When the app is run in Debug configuration, debugging overhead always results in a small performance reduction.
In the
*Client*
app, set a breakpoint on thecurrentCount++;
line inPages/Counter.razor
.In the browser, navigate to
Counter
page and select the Click me button to hit the breakpoint.In Visual Studio, inspect the value of the
currentCount
field in the Locals window.Press F5 to continue execution.
While debugging a Blazor WebAssembly app, you can also debug server code:
- Set a breakpoint in the
Pages/FetchData.razor
page in OnInitializedAsync. - Set a breakpoint in the
WeatherForecastController
in theGet
action method. - Browse to the
Fetch Data
page to hit the first breakpoint in theFetchData
component just before it issues an HTTP request to the server. - Press F5 to continue execution and then hit the breakpoint on the server in the
WeatherForecastController
. - Press F5 again to let execution continue and see the weather forecast table rendered in the browser.
Note
Breakpoints are not hit during app startup before the debug proxy is running. This includes breakpoints in Program.Main
(Program.cs
) and breakpoints in the OnInitialized{Async}
lifecycle methods of components that are loaded by the first page requested from the app.
If the app is hosted at a different app base path than /
, update the following properties in Properties/launchSettings.json
to reflect the app's base path:
applicationUrl
:inspectUri
of each profile:
The placeholders in the preceding settings:
{INSECURE PORT}
: The insecure port. A random value is provided by default, but a custom port is permitted.{APP BASE PATH}
: The app's base path.{SECURE PORT}
: The secure port. A random value is provided by default, but a custom port is permitted.{PROFILE 1, 2, ... N}
: Launch settings profiles. Usually, an app specifies more than one profile by default (for example, a profile for IIS Express and a project profile, which is used by Kestrel server).
In the following examples, the app is hosted at /OAT
with an app base path configured in wwwroot/index.html
as <base href='/OAT/'>
:
For information on using a custom app base path for Blazor WebAssembly apps, see Host and deploy ASP.NET Core Blazor.
Debug standalone Blazor WebAssembly
For information on configuring VS Code assets in the .vscode
folder, see the Linux operating system guidance in Tooling for ASP.NET Core Blazor.
Open the standalone Blazor WebAssembly app in VS Code.
You may receive a notification that additional setup is required to enable debugging:
Additional setup is required to debug Blazor WebAssembly applications.
If you receive the notification:
- Confirm that the latest C# for Visual Studio Code Extension is installed. To inspect the installed extensions, open View > Extensions from the menu bar or select the Extensions icon in the Activity sidebar.
- When using the C# for Visual Studio Code Extensionversion 1.23.9 or later, confirm that the latest Blazor WASM Debugging Extension is installed. To inspect the installed extensions, open View > Extensions from the menu bar or select the Extensions icon in the Activity sidebar.
- Confirm that JavaScript preview debugging is enabled. Open the settings from the menu bar (File > Preferences > Settings). Search using the keywords
debug preview
. In the search results, set or confirm that the check box for Debug > JavaScript: Use Preview is checked. If the option to enable preview debugging isn't present, either upgrade to the latest version of VS Code or install the JavaScript Debugger Extension (VS Code versions 1.46 or earlier). - Reload the window.
Start debugging using the F5 keyboard shortcut or the menu item.
Note
Start Without Debugging (Ctrl+F5) isn't supported. When the app is run in Debug configuration, debugging overhead always results in a small performance reduction.
When prompted, select the Blazor WebAssembly Debug option to start debugging.
The standalone app is launched, and a debugging browser is opened.
In the
*Client*
app, set a breakpoint on thecurrentCount++;
line inPages/Counter.razor
.In the browser, navigate to
Counter
page and select the Click me button to hit the breakpoint.
Note
Breakpoints are not hit during app startup before the debug proxy is running. This includes breakpoints in Program.Main
(Program.cs
) and breakpoints in the OnInitialized{Async}
lifecycle methods of components that are loaded by the first page requested from the app.
Debug hosted Blazor WebAssembly
Open the
Client
project folder of the hosted Blazor solution folder in VS Code.If there's no launch configuration set for the project, the following notification appears. Select Yes.
Required assets to build and debug are missing from '{APPLICATION NAME}'. Add them?
For information on configuring VS Code assets in the
.vscode
folder, see the Linux operating system guidance in Tooling for ASP.NET Core Blazor.In the command palette at the top of the window, select the Server project within the hosted solution.
Visual Studio Open Web Browser
A launch.json
file is generated with the launch configuration for launching the debugger.
Attach to an existing debugging session
To attach to a running Blazor app, create a launch.json
file with the following configuration:
Note
Attaching to a debugging session is only supported for standalone apps. To use full-stack debugging, you must launch the app from VS Code.
Launch configuration options
The following launch configuration options are supported for the blazorwasm
debug type (.vscode/launch.json
).
Option | Description |
---|---|
request | Use launch to launch and attach a debugging session to a Blazor WebAssembly app or attach to attach a debugging session to an already-running app. |
url | The URL to open in the browser when debugging. Defaults to https://localhost:5001 . |
browser | The browser to launch for the debugging session. Set to edge or chrome . Defaults to chrome . |
trace | Used to generate logs from the JS debugger. Set to true to generate logs. |
hosted | Must be set to true if launching and debugging a hosted Blazor WebAssembly app. |
webRoot | Specifies the absolute path of the web server. Should be set if an app is served from a sub-route. |
timeout | The number of milliseconds to wait for the debugging session to attach. Defaults to 30,000 milliseconds (30 seconds). |
program | A reference to the executable to run the server of the hosted app. Must be set if hosted is true . |
cwd | The working directory to launch the app under. Must be set if hosted is true . |
env | The environment variables to provide to the launched process. Only applicable if hosted is set to true . |
Example launch configurations
Launch and debug a standalone Blazor WebAssembly app
Attach to a running app at a specified URL
Launch and debug a hosted Blazor WebAssembly app with Microsoft Edge
Browser configuration defaults to Google Chrome. When using Microsoft Edge for debugging, set browser
to edge
. To use Google Chrome, either don't set the browser
option or set the option's value to chrome
.
In the preceding example, MyHostedApp.Server.dll
is the Server app's assembly. The .vscode
folder is located in the solution's folder next to the Client
, Server
, and Shared
folders.
To debug a Blazor WebAssembly app in Visual Studio for Mac:
Visual Studio In Browser
Create a new ASP.NET Core hosted Blazor WebAssembly app.
Press ⌘+↩ to run the app in the debugger.
Note
Start Without Debugging (⌥+⌘+↩) isn't supported. When the app is run in Debug configuration, debugging overhead always results in a small performance reduction.
Important
Google Chrome or Microsoft Edge must be the selected browser for the debugging session.
In the
*Client*
app, set a breakpoint on thecurrentCount++;
line inPages/Counter.razor
.In the browser, navigate to
Counter
page and select the Click me button to hit the breakpoint:In Visual Studio, inspect the value of the
currentCount
field in the Locals window.Press ⌘+↩ to continue execution.
While debugging a Blazor WebAssembly app, you can also debug server code:
- Set a breakpoint in the
Pages/FetchData.razor
page in OnInitializedAsync. - Set a breakpoint in the
WeatherForecastController
in theGet
action method. - Browse to the
Fetch Data
page to hit the first breakpoint in theFetchData
component just before it issues an HTTP request to the server. - Press ⌘+↩ to continue execution and then hit the breakpoint on the server in the
WeatherForecastController
. - Press ⌘+↩ again to let execution continue and see the weather forecast table rendered in the browser.
Note
Breakpoints are not hit during app startup before the debug proxy is running. This includes breakpoints in Program.Main
(Program.cs
) and breakpoints in the OnInitialized{Async}
lifecycle methods of components that are loaded by the first page requested from the app.
For more information, see Debugging with Visual Studio for Mac.
Debug in the browser
Cached
The guidance in this section applies to Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge running on Windows.
Run a Debug build of the app in the Development environment.
Launch a browser and navigate to the app's URL (for example,
https://localhost:5001
).In the browser, attempt to commence remote debugging by pressing Shift+Alt+d.
The browser must be running with remote debugging enabled, which isn't the default. If remote debugging is disabled, an Unable to find debuggable browser tab error page is rendered with instructions for launching the browser with the debugging port open. Follow the instructions for your browser, which opens a new browser window. Close the previous browser window.
Visual Studio Set Browser
Once the browser is running with remote debugging enabled, the debugging keyboard shortcut in the previous step opens a new debugger tab.
After a moment, the Sources tab shows a list of the app's .NET assemblies within the
file://
node.In component code (
.razor
files) and C# code files (.cs
), breakpoints that you set are hit when code executes. After a breakpoint is hit, single-step (F10) through the code or resume (F8) code execution normally.
Blazor provides a debugging proxy that implements the Chrome DevTools Protocol and augments the protocol with .NET-specific information. When debugging keyboard shortcut is pressed, Blazor points the Chrome DevTools at the proxy. The proxy connects to the browser window you're seeking to debug (hence the need to enable remote debugging).
Browser source maps
Browser source maps allow the browser to map compiled files back to their original source files and are commonly used for client-side debugging. However, Blazor doesn't currently map C# directly to JavaScript/WASM. Instead, Blazor does IL interpretation within the browser, so source maps aren't relevant.
Firewall configuration
If a firewall blocks communication with the debug proxy, create a firewall exception rule that permits communication between the browser and the NodeJS
process.
Warning
Modification of a firewall configuration must be made with care to avoid creating security vulnerablities. Carefully apply security guidance, follow best security practices, and respect warnings issued by the firewall's manufacturer.
Permitting open communication with the NodeJS
process:
- Opens up the Node server to any connection, depending on the firewall's capabilities and configuration.
- Might be risky depending on your network.
- Is only recommended on developer machines.
Debug ASP.NET Core Blazor WebAssembly | Microsoft Docs
If possible, only allow open communication with the NodeJS
process on trusted or private networks.
For Windows Firewall configuration guidance, see Create an Inbound Program or Service Rule. For more information, see Windows Defender Firewall with Advanced Security and related articles in the Windows Firewall documentation set.
Troubleshoot
If you're running into errors, the following tips may help:
- In the Debugger tab, open the developer tools in your browser. In the console, execute
localStorage.clear()
to remove any breakpoints. - Confirm that you've installed and trusted the ASP.NET Core HTTPS development certificate. For more information, see Enforce HTTPS in ASP.NET Core.
- Visual Studio requires the Enable JavaScript debugging for ASP.NET (Chrome, Edge and IE) option in Tools > Options > Debugging > General. This is the default setting for Visual Studio. If debugging isn't working, confirm that the option is selected.
- If your environment uses an HTTP proxy, make sure that
localhost
is included in the proxy bypass settings. This can be done by setting theNO_PROXY
environment variable in either:- The
launchSettings.json
file for the project. - At the user or system environment variables level for it to apply to all apps. When using an environment variable, restart Visual Studio for the change to take effect.
- The
- Ensure that firewalls or proxies don't block communication with the debug proxy (
NodeJS
process). For more information, see the Firewall configuration section.
Breakpoints in OnInitialized{Async}
not hit
The Blazor framework's debugging proxy takes a short time to launch, so breakpoints in the OnInitialized{Async}
lifecycle methods might not be hit. We recommend adding a delay at the start of the method body to give the debug proxy some time to launch before the breakpoint is hit. You can include the delay based on an if
compiler directive to ensure that the delay isn't present for a release build of the app.
OnInitialized:
OnInitializedAsync:
Visual Studio (Windows) timeout
If Visual Studio throws an exception that the debug adapter failed to launch mentioning that the timeout was reached, you can adjust the timeout with a Registry setting:
Visual Studio Code Browser Preview
The {TIMEOUT}
placeholder in the preceding command is in milliseconds. For example, one minute is assigned as 60000
.