![]() ![]() However, you can also use the %LOCALAPPDATA% variable which will point you to a user's "local" folder. The confusion might have been using the %APPDATA% variable for everything, which points to the "Roaming" directory. I am wondering how to get this feature back, and also what the correct name for this right side bar preview thing is. In sublime text 2 it always stayed highlighted on where you are in the file, but in 3 it no longer does. But it would be an improvement to move these machine-specific files to \local, for example on my machine: When you open a file in sublime text it shows a small version of it on the right side where you can click and scroll. So that "C:\Users\userName\AppData\Roaming\Sublime Text 3\Local" remains local. "C:\Users\userName\AppData\Roaming\Sublime Text 3\Installed Packages" All global configuration for Sublime (including installed packages) is stored in /.config/sublime-text-3 (or APPDATASublime Text 3 on Windows, or /Library/. "C:\Users\userName\AppData\Roaming\Sublime Text 3\Packages" It's possible to workaround this by creating symlinks further down the directory tree: \Roaming\local, which prevents this conflict and seems to be the correct location for machine-specific settings. In my case the desktop and laptop installations of ST3 keep overwriting each other's keys (License.sublime_license) in the Roaming\local directory. The problem occurs for users that have created a symlink for their roaming folder that points to a shared location. "C:\Users\userName\AppData\Local\Sublime Text 3\Local" "C:\Users\userName\AppData\Roaming\Sublime Text 3\Local" If you have backup of these files, you should be able. ![]() The ST3 license key is located in a folder "local" under "Roaming": \Roaming\local instead of just \local. ST has to store the file contents between restarts somewhere, and that is either the workspace file of your project or the session file somewhere in the application data folder ( Data/Local/.sublimesession ). There are several user-specific folder locations for application settings on Windows. This doesn't cause software failures, but has the potential to cause problems if people are synchronizing application settings between machines using something like Dropbox. I’ve been using Sublime Text since forever, and I guess the fact that my files would survive a quit a restart made me complacent, and I had a bunch of files I just never saved. ![]() I think there is a mistake in where the Submlime Text 3 user license is stored on Windows. I know it’s a bit of a long shot, but I’ve lost a bunch of unsaved buffers from Sublime Text 3. ![]()
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