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This NPM module allows to integrate full VSCode functionality into your monaco-editor
.
For more information, please checkout the project's wiki.
npm install vscode@npm:@codingame/monaco-vscode-api
npm install monaco-editor@npm:@codingame/monaco-vscode-editor-api
npm install -D @types/vscode
@codingame/monaco-vscode-api
is installed as an alias to vscode
to be able to run import * as vscode from 'vscode'
, similar to what is done inside a VSCode extension
@codingame/monaco-vscode-editor-api
is installed as an alias to monaco-editor
because it provides the same api as the official monaco-editor
If you are just starting with monaco-editor
and monaco-vscode-api
you may find helpful the Getting Started Guide in the wiki.
Most of VSCode functionality implemented as "services", e.g.
- theme service, providing support for VSCode themes
- languages service, providing support for different language features.
By default, Monaco uses a simplified versions of the VSCode services, called standalone
services.
This package allows to
- override them with fully-functional alternatives from VSCode
- add new services that were not included in Monaco
Here is an example usage that overrides Monaco default configuration with VSCode json-based settings:
// default monaco-editor imports
import * as monaco from 'monaco-editor';
import editorWorker from 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/editor/editor.worker?worker';
// utilities to override Monaco services
import { initialize } from 'vscode/services'
import getConfigurationServiceOverride, { updateUserConfiguration } from '@codingame/monaco-vscode-configuration-service-override'
window.MonacoEnvironment = {
getWorker: (_moduleId, _label) => new editorWorker()
}
// overriding Monaco service with VSCode
await initialize({
...getConfigurationServiceOverride(),
});
// json config like in vscode settings.json
updateUserConfiguration(`{
"editor.fontSize": 30,
"editor.lineHeight": 30,
"editor.fontFamily": "monospace",
"editor.fontWeight": "bold",
"editor.letterSpacing": 0,
}`)
// creating an editor with VSCode configuration
monaco.editor.create(document.getElementById('editor')!, {
value: "Editor with VSCode config and large bold fonts",
});
Note
initialize
can only be called once (and it should be called BEFORE creating your first editor).
Each get<service-name>ServiceOverride
contains the service and some glue to make VSCode service work with Monaco.
Some basic service overrides are coming with this package as dependencies:
-
Base:
@codingame/monaco-vscode-base-service-override
- Contains some general-use services that are mandatory to most of the other features
-
Host:
@codingame/monaco-vscode-host-service-override
- Interaction with the host/browser (shutdown veto, focus/active management, window opening, fullscreen...)
-
Extensions:
@codingame/monaco-vscode-extensions-service-override
- Support for VSCode extensions.
- A worker configuration can be provided to it:
- Then, the webworker extension host will be available, allowing to run extensions in a worker which runs in an iframe
-
Files:
@codingame/monaco-vscode-files-service-override
- It adds the overlay filesystem for
file://
files, but also adds the support for lazy loaded extension files. It adds separate memory user files (e.g. config, keybindings), cache files and log files - It supports adding overlay filesystems for
file://
files
- It adds the overlay filesystem for
-
QuickAccess:
@codingame/monaco-vscode-quickaccess-service-override
- Enables the quickaccess menu in the editor (press F1 or ctrl+shift+p)
However, most of the services are separated into different modules, so they can be imported as required. You can find a full list of services in the corresponding wiki page.
VSCode uses a bunch of default extensions. Most of them are used to load the default languages and grammars (see https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/tree/main/extensions).
This library bundles and publishes them as separate packages, which allows to use the ones you want. To use an extension, just install the corresponding package and import it in the beginning of the file:
import '@codingame/monaco-vscode-javascript-default-extension'
import '@codingame/monaco-vscode-json-default-extension'
...
Here is an example of usage of default VSCode theme extension with theme service override:
// importing default VSCode theme extension
import "@codingame/monaco-vscode-theme-defaults-default-extension";
// default monaco-editor imports
import * as monaco from 'monaco-editor';
import editorWorker from 'monaco-editor/esm/vs/editor/editor.worker?worker';
// utilities to override Monaco services
import { initialize } from 'vscode/services'
import getThemeServiceOverride from "@codingame/monaco-vscode-theme-service-override";
window.MonacoEnvironment = {
getWorker: function (_moduleId, _label) {
return new editorWorker();
}
}
// overriding Monaco service with VSCode
await initialize({
...getThemeServiceOverride(),
});
// creating an editor with VSCode theme
monaco.editor.create(document.getElementById('editor')!, {
value: "Editor with VSCode Theme Support",
});
See the full list of ported default extensions
VSCode extensions are bundled as vsix files. This library publishes a rollup plugin (vite-compatible) that allows to load a vsix file.
- rollup/vite config:
import vsixPlugin from '@codingame/monaco-vscode-rollup-vsix-plugin'
...
plugins: [
...,
vsixPlugin()
]
- code:
import './extension.vsix'
This library also offers the possibility to localize vscode and the extensions in the supported languages. To do so, import one of the following packages before anything else:
@codingame/monaco-vscode-language-pack-cs
@codingame/monaco-vscode-language-pack-de
@codingame/monaco-vscode-language-pack-es
@codingame/monaco-vscode-language-pack-fr
@codingame/monaco-vscode-language-pack-it
@codingame/monaco-vscode-language-pack-ja
@codingame/monaco-vscode-language-pack-ko
@codingame/monaco-vscode-language-pack-pl
@codingame/monaco-vscode-language-pack-pt-br
@codingame/monaco-vscode-language-pack-qps-ploc
@codingame/monaco-vscode-language-pack-ru
@codingame/monaco-vscode-language-pack-tr
@codingame/monaco-vscode-language-pack-zh-hans
@codingame/monaco-vscode-language-pack-zh-hant
The official monaco-editor
package provides a function to create models: monaco.editor.createModel
.
This method creates a standalone model that cannot be found or used by any VSCode services.
The recommended way is to used the createModelReference
method instead (added on top of the official monaco-editor api) which returns instead a reference to a model.
It has some pros:
- The model reference can be used by VSCode services, allowing for instance following links between files (ctrl+click)
- The returned model is bound to a filesystem file, and you have access to methods allowing to control the file lifecycle (saving the file, accessing the dirty state...)
- It is possible to call the method multiple times on the same file to get multiple references. The model is disposed when there is no reference left
To work, it needs the file to exist on the virtual filesystem. It can be achieved either by:
- using the
registerFileSystemOverlay
from the files service override, which can be cleaned when not needed anymore (recommended) - by using the second argument of the
createModelReference
function, which writes the file content to the virtual filesystem before creating the model
before:
import * as monaco from 'monaco-editor'
const model = monaco.editor.createModel(...)
const editor = monaco.editor.create({ model, ... })
...
model.dispose()
editor.dispose()
after:
import * as monaco from 'monaco-editor'
import { RegisteredFileSystemProvider, RegisteredMemoryFile, registerFileSystemOverlay } from '@codingame/monaco-vscode-files-service-override'
const fileUri = monaco.Uri.file(<file uri>);
const fileSystemProvider = new RegisteredFileSystemProvider(false)
fileSystemProvider.registerFile(new RegisteredMemoryFile(fileUri, <file content>))
const overlayDisposable = registerFileSystemOverlay(1, fileSystemProvider)
const modelRef = await monaco.editor.createModelReference(fileUri)
const editor = monaco.editor.create({ model: modelRef.object.textEditorModel })
...
await modelRef.object.save()
...
modelRef.dispose()
editor.dispose()
overlayDisposable.dispose()
createModelReference
return a reference to a model. The value is fetched from the memory filesystem.
The reference can then be disposed, the model will only be disposed if there is no remaining references.
To be able to use the VSCode api directly from your code, you need to import vscode/localExtensionHost
and wait for the services to be initialized.
You will then be able to import it as if you were in a VSCode extension:
import * as vscode from 'vscode'
import 'vscode/localExtensionHost'
const range = new vscode.Range(...)
vscode.languages.registerCompletionItemProvider(...)
You can also register a new extension from its manifest:
import { registerExtension, initialize, ExtensionHostKind } from 'vscode/extensions'
await initialize()
const { registerFileUrl, getApi } = registerExtension({
name: 'my-extension',
publisher: 'someone',
version: '1.0.0',
engines: {
vscode: '*'
},
contributes: {
}
}, ExtensionHostKind.LocalProcess)
registerFileUrl('/file-extension-path.json', new URL('./file-real-path.json', import.meta.url).toString())
const vscode = await getApi()
vscode.languages.registerCompletionItemProvider(...)
Try it out on https://monaco-vscode-api.netlify.app/
There is a demo that showcases the service-override features. It includes:
- Languages
- VSCode themes
- Textmate grammars (requires VSCode themes)
- Notifications/Dialogs
- Model/Editor services
- Configuration service, with user configuration editor
- Keybinding service, with user keybindings editor
- Debuggers
- Remote agent
- and much more
From CLI run:
# build monaco-vscode-api (the demo use it as a local dependency)
npm ci
npm run build
# start demo
cd demo
npm ci
npm start
# OR: for vite debug output
npm run start:debug
For the debug feature, also run:
npm run start:debugServer
See the VSCode Server wiki page.
If something doesn't work, make sure to check out the Troubleshooting wiki page.
This project was mainly created to make the implementation of monaco-languageclient more robust and maintainable.
monaco-languageclient uses vscode-languageclient which was built to run inside a VSCode extension. VSCode extensions communicate with the editor via an API they can import into their code.
The VSCode api exports:
- Some functions to interact with the IDE (language feature registrations, command execution...)
- A lot of utility classes (Range, Position...)
The first implementations of monaco-languageclient were using a fake VSCode api implementation. The vscode-languageclient was hacked so the VSCode<->protocol object converters were mainly bypassed, so the fake VSCode api was receiving Language Server Protocol objects. Then the objects were transformed using custom transformers into Monaco objects to communicate with the monaco api.
This approach has some disadvantages:
- There is a lot of code to transform LSP objects into Monaco objects
- It's hard to follow the updates of VSCode and the language server protocol
- It doesn't behave exactly the same as in VSCode
With this library, it would be possible to plug vscode-languageclient directly on top of monaco, monaco-languageclient still helps to do so by:
- Adding some tweaks to the VSCode LanguageClient (Removing unsupported features...)
- Providing some examples on how to build an app using it
- Adding some tools (DisposableCollection)