Editor Setup
Customize your code editor to improve the Astro developer experience and unlock new features.
VS Code
Section titled VS CodeVS Code is a popular code editor for web developers, built by Microsoft. The VS Code engine also powers popular in-browser code editors like GitHub Codespaces and Gitpod.
Astro works with any code editor. However, VS Code is our recommended editor for Astro projects. We maintain an official Astro VS Code Extension that unlocks several key features and developer experience improvements for Astro projects.
- Syntax highlighting for
.astro
files. - TypeScript type information for
.astro
files. - VS Code Intellisense for code completion, hints and more.
To get started, install the Astro VS Code Extension today.
JetBrains IDEs
Section titled JetBrains IDEsInitial support for Astro landed in WebStorm 2023.1. You can install the official plugin through JetBrains Marketplace or by searching for “Astro” in the IDE’s Plugins tab. This plugin includes features like syntax highlighting, code completion, and formatting, and plans to add even more advanced features in the future. It is also available to all other JetBrains IDEs with JavaScript support.
Other Code Editors
Section titled Other Code EditorsOur amazing community maintains several extensions for other popular editors, including:
- VS Code Extension on Open VSX Official - The official Astro VS Code Extension, available on the Open VSX registry for open platforms like VSCodium
- Nova Extension Community - Provides syntax highlighting and code completion for Astro inside of Nova
- Vim Plugin Community - Provides syntax highlighting, indentation, and code folding support for Astro inside of Vim or Neovim
- Neovim LSP and TreeSitter Plugins Community - Provides syntax highlighting, treesitter parsing, and code completion for Astro inside of Neovim
- Emacs - See instructions for Configuring Emacs and Eglot Community to work with Astro
- Astro syntax highlighting for Sublime Text Community - The Astro package for Sublime Text, available on the Sublime Text package manager.
In-Browser Editors
Section titled In-Browser EditorsIn addition to local editors, Astro also runs well on in-browser hosted editors, including:
- StackBlitz and CodeSandbox - online editors that run in your browser, with built-in syntax highlighting support for
.astro
files. No installation or configuration required! - GitHub.dev - allows you to install the Astro VS Code extension as a web extension, which gives you access to only some of the full extension features. Currently, only syntax highlighting is supported.
- Gitpod - a full dev environment in the cloud that can install the official Astro VS Code Extension from Open VSX.
Other tools
Section titled Other toolsESLint
Section titled ESLintESLint is a popular linter for JavaScript and JSX. For Astro support, a community maintained plugin can be installed.
See the project’s User Guide for more information on how to install and set up ESLint for your project.
Stylelint
Section titled StylelintStylelint is a popular linter for CSS. A community maintained Stylelint configuration provides Astro support.
Installation instructions, editor integration, and additional information can be found in the project’s README.
Prettier
Section titled PrettierPrettier is a popular formatter for JavaScript, HTML, CSS, and more. If you’re using the Astro VS Code Extension or the Astro language server within another editor, code formatting with Prettier is included.
To add support for formatting .astro
files outside of the editor (e.g. CLI) or inside editors that don’t support our editor tooling, install the official Astro Prettier plugin.
To get started, first install Prettier and the plugin:
Prettier will then automatically detect the plugin and use it to process .astro
files when you run it:
See the Prettier plugin’s README for more information about its supported options, how to set up Prettier inside VS Code, and more.
Due to upstream issues inside Prettier, the plugin will not be automatically detected when using pnpm. In order to make it find the plugin, the following parameter needs to be added when running Prettier:
Additional settings are also required when using Prettier inside VS Code. See the plugin’s README for more information.