It really works. But....
1. The downloading process for the packages is not always error-free, sometimes it is aborting.
What you have tried, is downloading ALL, I would not recommend that...
2. It's really big.
Take this:
The following command downloads the whole VS 2017 for only English language, and there was exactly 20,6 GB shown in explorer (1901 files).
I don't know how big the whole data for all languages
With downloading only a part of this
And I am not sure, if I got all, with another try I got less...
So at least add the language parameter: "--lang en-US" or two languages...
3. In internet connection is used always for initialization (there should be parameters to avoid that, but there is are not exactly known which should work until now...)
4. No.3 seems is bad, admitted. But there is a good point to say about the installer too: It is enough to download only a part of files offline, and the installer is smart enough to download all these files from internet, which don't exist (offline) on your disk.
So, you can start with:
vs_enterprise__873301792.1489161815.exe --layout %CD%\vs2017offline --lang en-US --add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.ManagedDesktop
This downloads only 1 GB. It should be possible to extend that line with:
--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.Data
--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.NetWeb
--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.Node
--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.Universal
--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.NetCoreTools
If there is an error, download them step-by-step.
Then you have all main .NET parts. (Cordova, Azure, MS Office adapter, game programming, Unity not mentioned here).
For more details, look here: Visual Studio 2017 workload and component IDs.
For C++ standard install add:
--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Workload.NativeDesktop (for C++)
More possible options/packages:
--add Component.GitHub.VisualStudio
--add Microsoft.Component.Blend.SDK.WPF
--add Microsoft.Component.HelpViewer
--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.TestTools.Core
--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.TestTools.MicrosoftTestManager
--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.TestTools.WebLoadTest
--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.TypeScript.2.0
--add Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.TestTools.CodedUITest
All together, it's less than 3 GB... Maybe you prefer this to the 20++ GB monster. Make an .iso out of that (I have used AnyBurn), and: ready. You can install on a PC with mobile connection without big costs, only be sure to select the correct language (here English) for the VS installer, if your Windows was started in another language. Because of that, the VS installer downloaded again 1 GB, but it was my fault...