> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.v3code.dev/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# Coming from VS Code

> V3Code is a VS Code fork, so your setup comes with you — pull settings from VS Code, Cursor, or Windsurf.

V3Code is a fork of VS Code, so it should feel like home from the first launch — your muscle memory, keybindings, and the extension ecosystem all carry over. And you don't have to rebuild your setup by hand.

## Transfer your setup

In **Settings → Transfer**, pull your extensions and settings from an editor you already use:

* **Transfer from VS Code**
* **Transfer from Cursor**
* **Transfer from Windsurf**

One click brings your existing configuration into V3Code, so you start where you left off instead of from a blank slate.

## What's different

The editor is familiar; the intelligence is what's new. Once you're in, the parts worth learning are the agent [modes](/editor/modes), [Context Bridge](/editor/context-bridge), and [memory](/editor/memory) — the things a plain VS Code fork doesn't have.
