[new] — Android Studio Portable
D:\PortableDev\ ├── AndroidStudio\ │ ├── bin\ (with custom idea.properties) │ ├── jbr\ (JetBrains Runtime) │ └── plugins\ ├── AndroidSDK\ │ ├── platforms\ │ ├── build-tools\ │ └── platform-tools\ ├── Projects\ │ └── MyApp\ └── launcher.bat
At first glance, the answer seems to be a hard "no." Google’s official IDE is a beast—a sprawling 3GB+ behemoth that touches your registry, scatters configuration files across your user folder, and relies on hidden SDK paths. It is, by design, a resident application. android studio portable
@echo off REM Set drive letter to current directory's drive set DRIVE=%~d0 REM Set environment variables set ANDROID_HOME=%DRIVE%\PortableDev\AndroidSDK set ANDROID_SDK_ROOT=%DRIVE%\PortableDev\AndroidSDK set GRADLE_USER_HOME=%DRIVE%\PortableDev\.gradle REM Launch Studio with custom configs start "" "%DRIVE%\PortableDev\AndroidStudio\bin\studio64.exe" Only for the disciplined masochist. For years, the phrase "Android Studio Portable" has
For years, the phrase "Android Studio Portable" has haunted the forums of Stack Overflow and Reddit. Developers stuck behind strict corporate firewalls, freelancers hopping between co-working spaces, and students flitting between university lab PCs all ask the same question: Why can’t I just run Android Studio from a USB stick? freelancers hopping between co-working spaces