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I want to see the stack trace in any function of my code, so i made somthing like this to call it and print the stack trace:

public function PrintStackTrace() {
    try {
        throw new Error('StackTrace');
    } catch (e:Error) {
        trace(e.getStackTrace());
    }
}

I like to know if there are other way to do this. In some place, the Error class creates the stack trace, but maybe it didn't do it with ActionScript 3.0 so maybe it's not posible, but i want to know.

Thanks!

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2 Answers

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As far as I know, the only way to get the stack trace is via the getStackTrace() method in the Error class, just like you're already doing. In response to the example in your question, though, I would mention that you don't actually have to throw the Error -- you can just create it and call the method on it:

var tempError:Error = new Error();
var stackTrace:String = tempError.getStackTrace();

Also, like the documentation says, this only works in the debug version of Flash Player, so you can wrap this functionality in an if-block that checks the value of Capabilities.isDebugger if you want.

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Ok, thanks, i didn't realize that :) But, what a pity that getStackTrace() is the only way to get it. – lk Sep 29 '08 at 15:51
I want it to debug, not to the release, so there is no problem about that. And thanks again. – lk Sep 29 '08 at 16:32
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I figured out you can get all kinds of useful data from a stack trace. Check out this article on how to get the package name, class name, function name and file name from the stack trace. How to get file, package, class, and file name out of a stack trace

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