This extension provides a command to browse the current project using GitExtensions, from the Explorer and the Editor. It also support Workspaces.
From the Explorer, when you right-click (anywhere; a file or not) and then select the Browse with Git Extensions, Git Extensions will open in Browse mode for your current project.
You can right-click anywhere in an editor to Browse with Git Extensions. Git Extensions will then open in Browse mode, based on the file you are focused in.
The extension works with single files, folders, and workspaces.
- You need to have Git Extensions installed
- Git Extensions must be available globally (for Windows users: registered in the
PATHenvironment variable)
Git Extensions should register itself in the
PATH(checkbox during the installation process). If it did not and you need to manually add a variable to yourPATH, I wrote the following article about that: How to add your PHP runtime directory to your Windows 10 PATH environment variable. Just change...\php.exewithC:\Program Files (x86)\GitExtensions\GitExtensions.exe.
There are no settings at this point.
- The command does not work from the command palette (
ctrl+shift+p). For more info, please take a look at the following issue on GitHub Also work with keyboard nav.
- Update packages
- Update README
- Update build definition
- Fix WS-2019-0310
- Fix CVE-2020-7598
- Update the
vscodedependency to^1.1.33to remove atarvulnerability; see CVE-2018-20834.
- Added support for workspace; the right-clicked context menu item is now taken into consideration, opening GitExt based on that file or directory.
- Moved the
Browse with Git Extensionsoption up, right under the navigation section.
- Added the
Browse with Git Extensionscommand to the context menu of the editor, allowing to open GitExt from an opened file.
Update the vscode dependency to ^1.1.22 to remove the event-stream vulnerability.
The initial release of Git Extensions for VS Code, it contributes the Browse with Git Extensions command to the explorer's context menu.

