![]() ![]() Used to monitor variable values as you step through breakpoints while using the debugger. View existing breakpoints in a script while using the debugger. View the call stack while using the debugger. Opens a window with tools for defining, assigning, and managing tags for use with CollectionService. Opens a window with tools for creating and shaping terrain. Toggles a window containing recovered scripts. ![]() Lets you collaborate with other Roblox users. Shows feedback on looping services in your experience while it's running.ĭisplays the results from searching with Ctrl Shift F on Windows or ⌘ Shift F on macOS. View diagnostic information of your experience. Used to execute Luau code outside of scripts. Shows script errors and warnings without having to start running the experience. Shows any errors, warnings, or print outputs from running scripts. Shows information on every object, class, and enum in Roblox. Toggles the Toolbox window open and closed. Toggles the Asset Manager window for managing the experience's places, images, meshes, and more. Shows the Properties window containing all properties of selected object(s). If you haven’t had the pleasure of using this shortcut before, trust me, it’s incredibly useful and versatile, and should definitely be included in the Studio Script Editor.Shows the Explorer window containing a hierarchical tree of the instances and services in the place. Typically the shortcut is for this is some key combination + Up/Down arrow (Ctrl+Shift+Up/Down in SublimeText, Alt + Up/Down in VSCode, Alt+Shift+Up/Down in Intellij, etc…)īy using a combination of Shift, arrow keys, and the shortcut to select, move through, and edit a section of code this shortcut allows you to very quickly reorder a set of lines if you decide that they’re in the wrong order, which is normally a frustrating operation that requires manually cutting and pasting lines of code. Then, if you press the “move down” shortcut, you would get (with the text still selected): foo For instance, if you have the following: foo ![]() You probably know what I mean if you’ve used other code editors, but if you don’t, many code editors now have a keyboard shortcut which lets you “move” the currently selected lines of text up / down “through” the source code. ![]()
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