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Home/ Questions/Q 3425200
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T06:33:56+00:00 2026-05-18T06:33:56+00:00

Visual Studio uses two different GUI layouts depending on whether or not your code

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Visual Studio uses two different GUI layouts depending on whether or not your code is running. I understand the purpose of this (letting you only show debugging-related windows while you’re actually debugging) but I find this feature annoying and would prefer the same layout be used while both debugging and not.

Is it possible to disable this feature and, if so, how?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T06:33:57+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 6:33 am

    Interesting timing. Zain Naboulsi just wrote a few posts about this in the Visual Studio Tip and Tricks blog:

    1. Window Layouts: The Four Modes
    2. Window Layouts: Design, Debug, and Full Screen
    3. Window Layouts: File View

    The thing to remember here is that,
    both, your tool windows and your
    command bar customizations are saved
    separately for each state. There is
    no way to tell Visual Studio to use
    one state for all modes at this time.
    Additionally, when you shut down
    Visual Studio in any state, all four
    states are saved.

    EDIT

    Disclaimer: I haven’t tried this myself, but it look promising. If you export your Visual Studio settings and edit the resulting file with a text editor, you can find a <Category name="Environment_WindowLayout"> element with child elements for each layout. I would guess that copying <Design> into the <Debug> would result in both layouts being identical. Maybe someone can write a VS add-in or external utility to automate this 🙂

    Here is a simplification of what the relevant settings XML layout looks like:

    <UserSettings>
        <Category name="Environment_Group" ...>
            <Category name="Environment_WindowLayout" ...>
                <NoToolWin>
                    ...
                </NoToolWin>
                <Design>
                    ... 
                </Design>
                <Debug>
                    ...
                </Debug>
                <Design-FullScreen>
                    ...
                </Design-FullScreen>
            </Category>
        </Category>
    </UserSettings>
    
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