To define a basic JavaScript project, add a jsconfig.json at the root of your workspace:
This is useful if you are working with legacy code that uses implicit globals dependencies instead of imports for dependencies.
jsconfig.json files let you exclude some files from showing up in IntelliSense.
See Working with JavaScript for information about VS Code's JavaScript IntelliSense, how to configure it, and help troubleshooting common IntelliSense problems. VS Code provides IntelliSense within your JavaScript projects for many npm libraries such as React, lodash, and express and for other platforms such as node, serverless, or IoT. Sorry, your browser doesn't support HTML 5 video. IntelliSense shows you intelligent code completion, hover info, and signature information so that you can write code more quickly and correctly. For a more in-depth guide on how these features work and can be configured, see Working with JavaScript. Extensions from the VS Code Marketplace can augment or change most of these built-in features. This page summarizes the JavaScript features that VS Code ships with. Most of these features just work out of the box, while some may require basic configuration to get the best experience. Visual Studio Code includes built-in JavaScript IntelliSense, debugging, formatting, code navigation, refactorings, and many other advanced language features.