7

I've been working in C# and VB.NET a lot lately, and the other night I noticed this strange behavior when running some through a debugger and trying to look at the contents of a Dictionary object. I'm fairly certain I've looked through a Dictionary in C# before and saw its contents, but now what I'm seeing is:

C# Dictionary in the debugger

Poking around in those sub parts, like the keys and values, doesn't show what's in the dictionary, just take me around in a loop to this same debugger window. I can't look at my values anywhere here.

Where as VB.NET looks fine:

VB.NET Dictionary in the debugger

Any idea why C# is different? Is there a setting or something I have off?

6
  • 3
    C# and VB.Net are very similar as far as the debugger is concerned. They both use IL as their intermediate language. The difference must be because you clicked on something different... I just tried it from C# and I can expand the dictionary and see all its items fine. The underlying dictionary is EXACTLY THE SAME CODE for C# or VB - they both use the same .Net libraries. Feb 18, 2013 at 18:25
  • @MatthewWatson Thus the reason for my great confusion, because the code is the same in both the c# and vb.net projects. Same kind of dictionary, even.
    – cost
    Feb 18, 2013 at 18:28
  • 1
    Here - stackoverflow.com/questions/2789580/… Although not directly related, I guess it will give you hint on this. Feb 18, 2013 at 18:35
  • @Matthew Watson: That is not true at all. VB.NET debugger and C# debugger interpret the System.Diagnostic attributes differently, e.g. the C# bug of always displaying hidden members if the source comes from the same solution was only recently introduced into VB.NET (can't tell why they didn't fix it in C#). VB.NET also had a differentiation between often and less used members, so normally a short list like a summary was displayed, and when needed one could switch to the full list (just a 2nd tab in the mouse-over). Only now with recent versions they are levelling the differences out a bit.
    – Christoph
    May 28, 2019 at 12:48
  • Since this question is still getting some attention, I think I fixed this simply by restarting Visual Studio.
    – cost
    May 28, 2019 at 16:29

1 Answer 1

3

Somehow you're being shown the "Raw View -> Non-Public members" window. However, the list of numerically-indexed values should be accessible if you scroll down in this window to the next-to-last row, "values". Can you post a screenshot showing the expanded "keys" window?

Uncheck Tools -> Options -> Debugging -> General, 4th option from last: "Show raw structure of objects in variable windows". (Thanks should also go to https://stackoverflow.com/a/13422426/2236012 for sharing this settings path.)

2
  • I posted in the question that opening up the keys and values window didn't actually display anything worthwhile. It just wound up being a loop back to the same window. I don't recall exactly what it showed, this problem was a while ago, but it wasn't giving me any of my values like I wanted. I don't know why.
    – cost
    Jun 11, 2013 at 17:10
  • Ok, i must've "optimized" over that sentence, probably because i was also looking at the screenshots when i read it... :"> Anyway, found a way to repro your problem, and i think my updated answer will solve the issue.
    – C.B.
    Jun 12, 2013 at 11:59

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.