Visual Studio 2017 SDK location is not changable - visual-studio

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When I try to install VS2017 Community, SDK location is set in D drive, which is my external HDD drive. I want to install this in my other SSD drive(not C drive) but install location is always unchangable. Dont know how to solve this. Try to force delete, CMD, and uninstall-reinstall over and over. Need serious help.

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How to install Visual Studio 2015 in external hard drive

I need to install VS15 inside an external hard drive due to c drive memory ran out. I have read this, is actually same problem but the answer provided (create mklink) I not really understand how to work in the correct steps. Does anyone can provide me the steps to install? I tried to install but
1) I able to ran after I install but I need the cross platform Xamarin, so when I wanna modify the updates, it say required memory spaces in both drivers (C: & D:), which is not enough spaces.
2) Is that possible to install the whole VS15 inside the external hard drive?
Your second question is a duplicate question for: How to install Visual Studio 2015 on a different drive.
As for your first question I think you mean to ask whether dependancies for Xamarin (Android SDK, Emulators) can be installed on a external drive - I suppose this is possible. You'd have to install all dependancies (Android NDK/SDK etc.) to your external drive and then configure Visual Studio to use those folders (Tools > Options > Xamarin > Android settings).
Keep in mind this is not ideal, due to the large number of I/O operations that are performed during building things like Android apps, not even taking an emulator into consideration.

How to choose VS 2017 workloads install path

I have a 120Gb SSD (C:) and a 1Tb HD (D:). Because of that I installed VS 2017 on D, but as I install workloads, it goes to C, and I don't have the space for that. I researched and found nothing, so here am I. Someone knows how to change the install location of these workflows?
Edit: I already changed the Android SDK folder.

Installing Visual Studio on another drive

I will be getting another pc where drive C: will be SSD and the rest of the drives HDD. The SSD size is significantly smaller so I don't want it to get full from just codes and Visual Studio stuff.
I came across this guide:
http://www.placona.co.uk/1196/dotnet/installing-visual-studio-on-a-different-drive/
but at the bottom, it says that it's not a permanent solution because updates will still get installed in drive C:
I haven't tried this yet but:
does the latest version of visual studio allow you to install on another drive?
would it be better if I create a VM (on another drive) then install Visual Studio there? any downside on developing while in a VM?

SAP Crystal Reports, version for VS 2010 installer issue

I've recently downloaded the installer for Crystal Reports version for VS 2010. I'm able to install it on my PC no problem. But the area I need help in is installing it on a drive that isn't the C drive. I'm trying to install it on the PC's D drive so that it can be accessed from other computers. But when I run the instillation, it only allows it to be installed on the C drive. There is a browse button to chose a different path. But the button is not enabled, there for giving me no choice. Does anyone know how i could enable the browse button, or if there is a better download that gives me the path choice. I downloaded the installer from http://www.businessobjects.com/jump/xi/crvs2010/us2_default.asp
Crystal Reports will need to be installed on each PC anyway (I believe it registers some COM components, registry, etc.) so even if you could change the installation path, it wouldn't save you any time/diskspace/etc.

Install Visual Studio 2008 Sp1 on "D" Drive

I am trying to install VS2008 sp1 to my work machine - it has a pathetic 10Gb C drive. The SP1 bootstrapper doesn't give the option to install items to D, only C. It needs 3Gb free and the machine only has about 700Mb.
VS allowed me to install to D originally why not the SP. The only thing I can think of that it requires system files installed in Windows etc, but I can't believe there are 3Gb worth of system files?
Worth a read:
http://blogs.msdn.com/heaths/archive/2008/07/24/why-windows-installer-may-require-so-much-disk-space.aspx
I was faced with the same problem, and ended up moving my Outlook archive.pst and the windows.edb (the new live search index file) over to D: to make room instead of trying to cram a square peg into a round hole with SP1 splitting drives. A huge help in this regard is WinDirStat, which scans a drive of your choice and identifies the size of every folder and file so that you can reveal some random large entities and move them if you can.
If you have an empty partition, you can try to create a mounted drive (i.e. map the partition to an empty folder on the C: drive) and see whether the SP1 bootstrapper will be able to use it.
I also ran into the same problem on a server that only has 20gb on the C: drive. I found a way to free up enough space to get the job done by reassigned the system's virtual memory allocation to use D: drive instead of C:. This freed up about 4gb in my case.
On Windows XP the place to set this is in My Computer system properties, Advanced tab, Performance Options:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/308417
I had the same problem with VS2008 installed on a C: drive that was only 12Gb in size.
I uninstalled VS2008 completely by following the manual steps in this page,
and then by using the auto-uninstaller:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/vstudio/bb968856.aspx
I then rebooted the machine.
I then re-installed VS2008 on the E: drive.
I then rebooted the machine.
I was then able to install SP1 - as now it did not need quite as much space on C: drive.
When you say "10Gb C drive", do you mean it's a 10-gig disk or a partition? If the former, you should really be looking at replacing the drive - it's old, and I'd be starting to worry about how much longer it has to live.
If the latter, then assuming that the C: drive restriction can't easily be worked around, then I'd look at increasing the size of the C: partition. Depending on how full the remainder of the drive is, this can take a while. I'd also be considering spending some tens of dollars ($40 or $50, I'd guess) on a partition manager from someone such as Acronis or Paragon. Kick it off just before you finish work for the day - it may take several hours, especially if the disk's fairly full.
Are you in place upgrading your current version or have you uninstalled VS 2008 Gold? By default, the installer won't let you change the directory if any existing versions of VS are installed.
To move the installation, you will need to uninstall all editions of 2008 you have installed (including any Express Editions) and then the choose installation location option should enable.
I vaguely recall having this happen to me when I had Office 2007 installed first before VS 2008. I don't remember what options that I had installed for Office 2007.
Update: I remember now it had to do with the fact that I had Visual Studio Tools for Office already installed. When I upgraded my computer I did a clean install of everything without problems by installing VS 2008 before installing Office 2007 and VSTO. So most likely you have to uninstall whatever is causing VS 2008 to want to go to a specific drive.
Even if you do get it to switch drives it still is going to put a lot of stuff on the system drive.
You could also download the full VS2008 SP1 ISO image from here.
Then you can either burn it to DVD or use a tool such as Virtual CD-ROM Control Panel from Microsoft to mount the ISO as another drive.
After mounting the ISO as a virtual drive, you can run the SP1 install from there.

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