Launch VSC with clean or custom profile





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Normally VSC stores settings and user data in %appdata%Code (and extensions in %userprofile%.vscode.



Is there a way to tell new instance to load some other profile or start with a "blank canvas" (like you can do with Firefox using -no-remote -profile "pathtoprofile" command line arguments)?



It would be great for testing.










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    Normally VSC stores settings and user data in %appdata%Code (and extensions in %userprofile%.vscode.



    Is there a way to tell new instance to load some other profile or start with a "blank canvas" (like you can do with Firefox using -no-remote -profile "pathtoprofile" command line arguments)?



    It would be great for testing.










    share|improve this question

























      0












      0








      0


      1






      Normally VSC stores settings and user data in %appdata%Code (and extensions in %userprofile%.vscode.



      Is there a way to tell new instance to load some other profile or start with a "blank canvas" (like you can do with Firefox using -no-remote -profile "pathtoprofile" command line arguments)?



      It would be great for testing.










      share|improve this question














      Normally VSC stores settings and user data in %appdata%Code (and extensions in %userprofile%.vscode.



      Is there a way to tell new instance to load some other profile or start with a "blank canvas" (like you can do with Firefox using -no-remote -profile "pathtoprofile" command line arguments)?



      It would be great for testing.







      visual-studio-code






      share|improve this question













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      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Apr 5 '18 at 8:29









      myfmyf

      3,46411726




      3,46411726
























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          Yes, it is possible and documented in Advanced CLI options, arguments:




          --user-data-dir <dir> Specifies the directory that user data is kept in, useful when running as root.



          --extensions-dir <dir> Sets the root path for extensions.




          So creating shortcut with both arguments provides possibility to have a "vanilla" VSC instance launcher:



          code --extensions-dir "C:tmp-exts" --user-data-dir "C:tmp-profile"


          Important: make sure you are invoking correct code executable: it should be VSCodebincode.cmd, not the VSCodeCode.exe (bug?).



          VSCode now supports portable mode, i.e. folder called data located in applications directory takes precedence over appdata (and for now even over command line switches, bug?).






          share|improve this answer


























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            Yes, it is possible and documented in Advanced CLI options, arguments:




            --user-data-dir <dir> Specifies the directory that user data is kept in, useful when running as root.



            --extensions-dir <dir> Sets the root path for extensions.




            So creating shortcut with both arguments provides possibility to have a "vanilla" VSC instance launcher:



            code --extensions-dir "C:tmp-exts" --user-data-dir "C:tmp-profile"


            Important: make sure you are invoking correct code executable: it should be VSCodebincode.cmd, not the VSCodeCode.exe (bug?).



            VSCode now supports portable mode, i.e. folder called data located in applications directory takes precedence over appdata (and for now even over command line switches, bug?).






            share|improve this answer






























              0














              Yes, it is possible and documented in Advanced CLI options, arguments:




              --user-data-dir <dir> Specifies the directory that user data is kept in, useful when running as root.



              --extensions-dir <dir> Sets the root path for extensions.




              So creating shortcut with both arguments provides possibility to have a "vanilla" VSC instance launcher:



              code --extensions-dir "C:tmp-exts" --user-data-dir "C:tmp-profile"


              Important: make sure you are invoking correct code executable: it should be VSCodebincode.cmd, not the VSCodeCode.exe (bug?).



              VSCode now supports portable mode, i.e. folder called data located in applications directory takes precedence over appdata (and for now even over command line switches, bug?).






              share|improve this answer




























                0












                0








                0







                Yes, it is possible and documented in Advanced CLI options, arguments:




                --user-data-dir <dir> Specifies the directory that user data is kept in, useful when running as root.



                --extensions-dir <dir> Sets the root path for extensions.




                So creating shortcut with both arguments provides possibility to have a "vanilla" VSC instance launcher:



                code --extensions-dir "C:tmp-exts" --user-data-dir "C:tmp-profile"


                Important: make sure you are invoking correct code executable: it should be VSCodebincode.cmd, not the VSCodeCode.exe (bug?).



                VSCode now supports portable mode, i.e. folder called data located in applications directory takes precedence over appdata (and for now even over command line switches, bug?).






                share|improve this answer















                Yes, it is possible and documented in Advanced CLI options, arguments:




                --user-data-dir <dir> Specifies the directory that user data is kept in, useful when running as root.



                --extensions-dir <dir> Sets the root path for extensions.




                So creating shortcut with both arguments provides possibility to have a "vanilla" VSC instance launcher:



                code --extensions-dir "C:tmp-exts" --user-data-dir "C:tmp-profile"


                Important: make sure you are invoking correct code executable: it should be VSCodebincode.cmd, not the VSCodeCode.exe (bug?).



                VSCode now supports portable mode, i.e. folder called data located in applications directory takes precedence over appdata (and for now even over command line switches, bug?).







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Nov 22 '18 at 22:09

























                answered Apr 5 '18 at 8:29









                myfmyf

                3,46411726




                3,46411726
































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