VS Code Go to Matching Pair Command










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This command won't work for me. I had installed the Visual Studio Keymap, but when I uninstalled that it made no difference. If I open Keyboard Shortcuts and try customizing it to some other keybinding, still nothing. I open the simplest javascript folder/file (folder with a single .js file) to test, simply putting the cursor on either side of the parens in console.log('hi');



Version is 1.28.2 (latest). The only other extensions I have installed are Debugger for Chrome & ESLint.










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    This command won't work for me. I had installed the Visual Studio Keymap, but when I uninstalled that it made no difference. If I open Keyboard Shortcuts and try customizing it to some other keybinding, still nothing. I open the simplest javascript folder/file (folder with a single .js file) to test, simply putting the cursor on either side of the parens in console.log('hi');



    Version is 1.28.2 (latest). The only other extensions I have installed are Debugger for Chrome & ESLint.










    share|improve this question
























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      0







      This command won't work for me. I had installed the Visual Studio Keymap, but when I uninstalled that it made no difference. If I open Keyboard Shortcuts and try customizing it to some other keybinding, still nothing. I open the simplest javascript folder/file (folder with a single .js file) to test, simply putting the cursor on either side of the parens in console.log('hi');



      Version is 1.28.2 (latest). The only other extensions I have installed are Debugger for Chrome & ESLint.










      share|improve this question













      This command won't work for me. I had installed the Visual Studio Keymap, but when I uninstalled that it made no difference. If I open Keyboard Shortcuts and try customizing it to some other keybinding, still nothing. I open the simplest javascript folder/file (folder with a single .js file) to test, simply putting the cursor on either side of the parens in console.log('hi');



      Version is 1.28.2 (latest). The only other extensions I have installed are Debugger for Chrome & ESLint.







      visual-studio-code






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      asked Nov 12 '18 at 16:16









      dudeNumber4

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          editor.action.jumpToBracket is what you want for .js files, Ctrl-Shift-.



          The "Go to matching pair" command: editor.emmet.action.matchTag is for html files.






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          • Thank. Even the Visual Studio thought go to matching pair was the appropriate command because that command was mapped to the keys that jump to matching delimiter in Visual Studio.
            – dudeNumber4
            Nov 12 '18 at 17:03










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          1 Answer
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          active

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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          0














          editor.action.jumpToBracket is what you want for .js files, Ctrl-Shift-.



          The "Go to matching pair" command: editor.emmet.action.matchTag is for html files.






          share|improve this answer




















          • Thank. Even the Visual Studio thought go to matching pair was the appropriate command because that command was mapped to the keys that jump to matching delimiter in Visual Studio.
            – dudeNumber4
            Nov 12 '18 at 17:03















          0














          editor.action.jumpToBracket is what you want for .js files, Ctrl-Shift-.



          The "Go to matching pair" command: editor.emmet.action.matchTag is for html files.






          share|improve this answer




















          • Thank. Even the Visual Studio thought go to matching pair was the appropriate command because that command was mapped to the keys that jump to matching delimiter in Visual Studio.
            – dudeNumber4
            Nov 12 '18 at 17:03













          0












          0








          0






          editor.action.jumpToBracket is what you want for .js files, Ctrl-Shift-.



          The "Go to matching pair" command: editor.emmet.action.matchTag is for html files.






          share|improve this answer












          editor.action.jumpToBracket is what you want for .js files, Ctrl-Shift-.



          The "Go to matching pair" command: editor.emmet.action.matchTag is for html files.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Nov 12 '18 at 16:43









          Mark

          11k33249




          11k33249











          • Thank. Even the Visual Studio thought go to matching pair was the appropriate command because that command was mapped to the keys that jump to matching delimiter in Visual Studio.
            – dudeNumber4
            Nov 12 '18 at 17:03
















          • Thank. Even the Visual Studio thought go to matching pair was the appropriate command because that command was mapped to the keys that jump to matching delimiter in Visual Studio.
            – dudeNumber4
            Nov 12 '18 at 17:03















          Thank. Even the Visual Studio thought go to matching pair was the appropriate command because that command was mapped to the keys that jump to matching delimiter in Visual Studio.
          – dudeNumber4
          Nov 12 '18 at 17:03




          Thank. Even the Visual Studio thought go to matching pair was the appropriate command because that command was mapped to the keys that jump to matching delimiter in Visual Studio.
          – dudeNumber4
          Nov 12 '18 at 17:03

















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