Visual Studio Isolated Shell

Note

This article applies to Visual Studio 2015. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here

The Visual Studio isolated shell allows you to create stand-alone applications that can run side-by-side with other versions of Visual Studio. It is used primarily to host specialized tools that can use Visual Studio services but also have a customized appearance and branding. Visual Studio features and menu command groups can be easily turned on and off. Application titles, application icons, and splash screens are fully customizable. For a list of customizable features, see Customizing the Isolated Shell.

To work with an isolated shell project, you must install the Visual Studio SDK. Starting in Visual Studio 2015, you do not install the Visual Studio SDK from the download center. It is included as an optional feature in Visual Studio setup. You can also install the VS SDK later on. For more information, see Installing the Visual Studio SDK.

To create an isolated shell application, start with a Visual Studio Shell Isolated project. This project contains everything that you need to develop and test your own isolated shell application. When you are ready to write the setup program that deploys your application, you must get the isolated shell redistributable package from Microsoft Visual Studio Shell (Isolated) Redistributable Package.

Note

Before you can access the isolated shell redistributable package, you will be asked to fill out a brief customer survey. After filling out the survey, you’ll be directed to a Visual Studio Connect page with redistributable package download links. You can find the download links on subsequent visits to the Visual Studio Connect site under the PROGRAMS | VISUAL STUDIO 2015 INTEGRATED AND ISOLATED SHELL tab.

Note

For more information about how to deploy an isolated shell-based application, see Walkthrough: Creating a Basic Isolated Shell Application.

Working with the isolated shell

A Visual Studio isolated shell application has full access to Visual Studio services and supports special customization and branding. There are several ways you can customize an isolated shell application:

  • You can use VSPackages and Managed Extensibility Framework (MEF) component parts to extend an isolated shell application just as you would use them in any other Visual Studio extension. For more information, see Extending the Isolated Shell.

  • To make Visual Studio features and menu command groups available or unavailable, update the .vsct file in the user interface (UI) project of the application.

  • To remove Options pages or other Visual Studio shell components from the application, update the .pkgundef file of the application.

  • To modify other aspects of the appearance or behavior of the shell, update the .pkgdef file of the application.

  • Some aspects of the shell can also be specified when the application is started. To do this, update the parameters in the call to the Start entry point of the appenvstub.dll.

    For more information about the different elements that you can customize, see Elements of the Isolated Shell.

Standard Features of the Isolated Shell

The following features are standard to all editions of Visual Studio.

Feature Category Feature
IDE Features Import/Export Settings

Toolbox Control Installer

Task List & Error List

Output Window

Start Page

Properties Window

Toolbox

Solution Explorer

Bookmark Window

Class View

Object Browser

Command Window

Document Outline

Resource View

External Tool

Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) Add Service Reference

Language Integrated Query (LINQ) Support
Editor/Designer Code browsing tools (unified find, source definition, inheritance)

IntelliSense

SmartTags

Code Snippets Manager

Code Snippets

Refactoring

Pretty listing

IntelliSense Filtering

Code Definition Window

Application Designer

Windows Forms Designer

Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) Designer
Debugging C# Expression Evaluator

Local debugging

Managed debugging

Edit and Continue

Cross-thread debugging

Visualizations

DataTips

Native debugging

Script debugging

Interop debugging

Just-in-time (JIT) debugging

Multi-process debugging

XSLT debugging

Attach to local process

Trace Points

Breakpoint Constraints
Data Server Explorer (Simplified - Data Only)

Data bind to local data (.MDF or .MDB)

Data bind to object

Data bind to Web service

Full set of data controls

XML editor

Data bind to local database server

Data Sources window
Web HTML Editor

Web Browser

Web Forms Designer

Web Site Project

Web Application Project
Extensibility Consumes VSPackages and MEF components

See Also

Shell (Isolated or Integrated)