If I set a breakpoint on a method, how can I see what called the method, when the breakpoint is hit in visual studio 2008?
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Check the Call Stack window (Debug, Windows, Call Stack). Double clicking each entry there will take you to the calling statement. You can also right click on it to enable/disable showing external code items and calls from other threads. |
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When the breakpoint is hit, you can view the entire call stack. You can bring that window up by going through the Debug menu->Windows->Call Stack. You can also bring it up by the shortcut Alt+Ctrl+C EDIT: You can also right-click on a function name, and view the "Callers Graph", which will show you all the callers for your method. Alternatively, you can bring the Call Browser (by going to View->Other windows->Call Browser ) and search for your method's name. |
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If you can't see anything in the Call Stack window, then there's definitely something wrong. I would suggest the famous sequence of R-actions:
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If you can't see anything in the call stack at a user-set breakpoint, it generally means it was called from native code. Another case where it can't get a stack: You hit Debug>Break All and the main thread is in a wait/sleep state, the debugger can have problems building the call stack. I believe the debugger uses the main thread for its implicit function evaluation. Try attaching (or launching) the mixed-mode (native & managed) code debugger and see if that straightens it out. |
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Is the break point in a function that is raised by an event? In that case, you might not have a direct call stack back to the caller, and will need to enable viewing all code, and not just "just my code". |
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