If you are working on Linux and OS X, you cannot use ISE because it is not supported on these platforms. In this case you can choose your favorite editor to write PowerShell scripts. Here we choose VS Code as a PowerShell editor as an example.
You can use VS Code on Windows with PowerShell V5 by using Windows 10 or by installing [Windows Management Framework 5.0 RTM](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=50395) for down-level Windows OSs.
Before starting it, please make sure PowerShell exists on your system. Follow the [Installing PowerShell](./learning-powershell.md#installing-powershell) instruction you can install the PowerShell and launch the PowerShell session.
[**1. Installing VS Code**](https://code.visualstudio.com/Docs/setup/setup-overview)
* **Linux**: follow the Installation instructions in the [Running VS Code on Linux](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/setup/linux) to setup VS Code application
* **OS X**: follow the Installation instructions in the [Running VS Code on OS X](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/setup/osx) to setup VS Code application
* **Windows**: download and install VS Code for your OS from [Visual Studio Code website](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/setup/windows).
**2. Installing PowerShell Extension**
- Launch the Visual Studio Code app by:
* **Windows**: typing **code** in your PowerShell session
* **Linux**: typing **code .** in your terminal
* **OS X**: typing **code** in your terminal
- Press **F1** (or **Ctrl+Shift+P**) which opens up the “Command Palette” inside the VS Code app.
- In the command palette, type **ext install** and hit Enter. It will show all VS Code extensions available on your system.
- Choose PowerShell and click on Install, you will see something like below
![VSCode](vscode.png)
- After the install, you will see the **Install** button turns to **Enable**.
- Open a file folder (**File->Open Folder**) where contains the PowerShell modules or scripts you have written already and want to debug. In this example, we saved helloworld.ps1 under home/jen/debug. Thus we select the "debug" folder and open it in VS Code.
Because some information regarding your scripts is needed for debugger to start executing your script, we need to set up the debug config First. This is one time only to debug PowerShell scripts under your current folder.
* Click on the **Debug** icon (or **Ctrl+Shift+D**)
* Click on the **Settings** icon that looks like a gear. The VS Code will prompt you to **Select Environment**. Choose **PowerShell**. Then the VS code will auto create a debug configuration settings file in the same folder. It looks like the following:
- Once the debug configuration is established, now go to your helloworld.ps1 and set a breakpoint by pressing **F9** on a line you wish to debug break into.