← 返回首页
Spring Boot in Visual Studio Code

Languages

Topics Overview JavaScript JSON HTML Emmet CSS, SCSS and Less TypeScript Markdown PowerShell C++ Java PHP Python Julia R Ruby Rust Go T-SQL C# .NET Swift Working with JavaScript Node.js Tutorial Node.js Debugging Deploy Node.js Apps Browser Debugging Angular Tutorial React Tutorial Vue Tutorial Debugging Recipes Performance Profiling Extensions Tutorial Transpiling Editing Refactoring Debugging Quick Start Tutorial Run Python Code Editing Linting Formatting Debugging Environments Testing Python Interactive Django Tutorial FastAPI Tutorial Flask Tutorial Create Containers Deploy Python Apps Python in the Web Settings Reference Getting Started Navigate and Edit Refactoring Formatting and Linting Project Management Build Tools Run and Debug Testing Spring Boot Modernizing Java Apps Application Servers Deploy Java Apps GUI Applications Extensions FAQ Intro Videos GCC on Linux GCC on Windows GCC on Windows Subsystem for Linux Clang on macOS Microsoft C++ on Windows Build with CMake CMake Tools on Linux CMake Quick Start C++ Dev Tools for Copilot Editing and Navigating Debugging Configure Debugging Refactoring Settings Reference Configure IntelliSense Configure IntelliSense for Cross-Compiling FAQ Intro Videos Get Started Navigate and Edit IntelliCode Refactoring Formatting and Linting Project Management Build Tools Package Management Run and Debug Testing FAQ
Copy as Markdown

On this page there are 6 sections

Spring Boot in Visual Studio Code

Visual Studio Code is an ideal lightweight development environment for Spring Boot application developers and there are several useful VS Code extensions including:

We recommend installing the Spring Boot Extension Pack that includes all of the extensions above.

If you run into any issues when using the features below, you can contact us by opening an issue.

Prerequisites

To develop a Spring Boot application in Visual Studio Code, you need to install the following:

Install the Extension Pack for Java

Install the Spring Boot Extension Pack

Note: More information about how to get started can be found at Getting Started with Java tutorial.

To help get you started with Java Spring Boot development, you can use the Java Spring profile template that includes useful extensions, settings, and Java Spring Boot code snippets.

Create the project

The Spring Initializr extension allows you to search for dependencies and generate new Spring Boot projects.

To install, launch VS Code and from the Extensions view (⇧⌘X (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+X)), search for vscode-spring-initializr.

Once you have the extension installed, open the Command Palette (⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P)) and type Spring Initializr to start generating a Maven or Gradle project and then follow the wizard.

Edit the project

The Spring Initializr extension allows you to add dependencies after generating a new Spring Boot project.

Navigate to your pom.xml file and right-click to select Add starters.... A dropdown will show the dependencies you already have beginning with a √ . You can search for other dependencies you want to add to your project. Or you can click on the existing dependencies to remove them.

Develop the application

The Spring Boot Tools extension includes rich language support for working with Spring Boot application.properties, application.yml, and .java files.

The extension supports the following features:

  • Quickly navigate to a Spring element in your workspace
  • Smart code completion for Spring specific components
  • Quick access to running Spring apps
  • Live application information
  • Code templates

Similar code completion and validation features are also available for .properties and .yml files.

To learn how to use these features, you can visit this detailed usage guide.

Below is an example showing live application information.

Run the application

In addition to using F5 to run your application, there's the Spring Boot Dashboard extension, which lets you view and manage all available Spring Boot projects in your workspace as well as quickly start, stop, or debug your project.

Next steps