Can you force Visual Studio to always run as an Administrator in Windows 8?
In Windows 8, Windows 10, and Windows 11, you have to right-click devenv.exe
and select "Troubleshoot compatibility".
- Select "Troubleshoot program"
- Check "The program requires additional permissions"
- Click "Next"
- Click "Test the program..."
- Wait for the program to launch
- Click "Next"
- Select "Yes, save these settings for this program"
- Click "Close"
If, when you open Visual Studio it asks to save changes to devenv.sln, see this answer to disable it:
Disable Visual Studio devenv solution save dialog
If you change your mind and wish to undo the "Run As Administrator" Compatibility setting, see the answer here: How to Fix Unrecognized Guid format in Visual Studio 2015
After looking on Super User I found this question which explains how to do this with the shortcut on the start screen. Similarly you can do the same when Visual Studio is pinned to the task bar. In either location:
- Right click the Visual Studio icon
- Go to
Properties
- Under the
Shortcut tab
selectAdvanced
- Check
Run as administrator
Unlike in Windows 7 this only works if you launch the application from the shortcut you changed. After updating both Visual Studio shortcuts it seems to also work when you open a solution file from Explorer.
Update Warning:
It looks like one of the major flaws in running Visual Studio with elevated permissions is since Explorer isn't running with them as well you can't drag and drop files into Visual Studio for editing. You need to open them through the file open dialog. Nor can you double click any file associated to Visual Studio and have it open in Visual Studio (aside from solutions it seems) because you'll get an error message saying There was a problem sending the command to the program.
Once I uncheck to always start with elevated permissions (using VSCommands) then I'm able to open files directly and drop them into an open instance of Visual Studio.
Update For The Daring: Despite there being no UI to turn off UAC like in the past, that I saw at least, you can still do so through the registry. The key to edit is:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\System
EnableLUA - DWORD 1-Enabled, 0-Disabled
After changing this Windows will prompt you to restart. Once restarted you'll be back to everything running with admin permissions if you're an admin. The issues I reported above are now gone as well.