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53

I've been working for years with VS's debugger, but every now and then I come across a feature I have never noticed before, and think "Damn! How could I have missed that? It's so useful!"

[Disclaimer: These tips work in VS 2005 on a C# project, no guarantees for older incarnations of VS or other languages]

Keep track of object instances

Working with multiple instances of a given class? How can you tell them apart? In pre-garbage collection programming days, it was easy to keep track of references - just look at the memory address. With .NET, you can't do that - objects can get moved around. Fortunately, the watches view lets you right-click on a watch and select 'Make Object ID'.

watches view

This appends a {1#}, {2#} etc. after the instance's value, effectively giving the instance a unique label. It looks like this:

numbered instance

The label is persisted for the lifetime of that object.

Meaningful values for watched variables

By default, a watched variable's value is it's type. If you want to see its fields, you have to expand it, and this could take a long time (or even timeout!) if there are many fields or they do something complicated.

However, some predefined types show more meaningful information :

  • strings show their actual contents
  • lists and dictionaries show their elements count etc.

meaningful info

Wouldn't it be nice to have that for my own types?

Hmm...

...some quality time with .NET Reflector shows how easily this can be accomplished with the DebuggerDisplay attribute on my custom type:

[System.Diagnostics.DebuggerDisplay("Employee: '{Name}'")]
public class Employee {
    public string Name { get { ... } }
    ...
}

... re-run, and...

ta da!

There's a lot more info on the subject here: MSDN

Break on all exceptions

... even the ones that are handled in code! I know, I'm such a n00b for not knowing about this ever since I was born, but here it goes anyway - maybe this will help someone someday:

You can force a debugged process to break into debug mode each time an exception is thrown. Ever went on a bug hunt for hours only to come across a piece of code like this?

try {
    runStrangeContraption();
} catch(Exception ex) {
    /* TODO: Will handle this error later */
}

Catching all exceptions is really handy in these cases. This can be enabled from Debug > Exceptions... (Ctrl-Alt-E). Tick the boxes in the 'Thrown' column for each type of exception you need.


Those were a few forehead-slapping moments for me. Would you care to share yours?

flag

This is more a note-to-self post than a question, but maybe others will find it useful. Hopefully, I'll learn something new too. – Cristi Diaconescu Oct 14 '08 at 14:45

11 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

Two in-code tricks:

I really like the System.Diagnostics.DebuggerStepThrough attribute; you can attach it to a class, method or property to make VS not enter the code by default when debugging. I prefer it over the DebuggerHidden attribute as it will still allow you to put breakpoints in the ignored code if you really need to debug it.

Another (sometimes) useful call is System.Diagnostics.Debugger.Launch(); when the execution hits it, you will be presented with the "select a debugger" dialog, and a debugger will start. A bit rude, but useful with particularly nasty to attach to processes, like a process that gets spawned by another and immediately executes your code.

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1  
I've recently learned about System.Diagnostics.DebuggerStepThrough - useful. Also, it so happens that I used Debugger.Launch a lot in the last couple of weeks - for a particular project, if I try to attach directly from the 'Attach to process' dialog, the process just dies, but using Debugger.Launch() attaches the (same?!) debugger just fine. – Cristi Diaconescu Sep 4 at 11:53
vote up 11 vote down

Here's another neat trick I learned:

System.Diagnostics.Debugger.Break()

programatically causes the debugger to break on the next instruction. The really nice part is, this also works for a program compiled in Release mode, without debugging information.

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3  
I prefer to surround that with If (System.Diagnostics.Debugger.IsAttached) { System.Diagnostics.Debugger.Break() } Otherwise clients can get nasty errors when this isn't taken out! – LFSR Consulting Dec 30 '08 at 17:18
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try {
    // do something big
}
catch {
    // breakpoint set here:
    throw CantHappenException("something horrible happened that should never happen.");
}

How do you see the exception that was originally thrown? In a watch window, enter $exception

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vote up 7 vote down

Of course, check out the VS tip of the day:

http://blogs.msdn.com/SaraFord/

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vote up 7 vote down

I always make sure to set the "Name" property on new threads that I create. That way, when I'm debugging I can more easily identify different threads.

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vote up 4 vote down

A few from me

  • Uncheck the "Enable Just My Code" option in Tools->Options->Debugging.
  • Conditional breakpoints - they save my life almost every day
  • Use the .NET framework source if things get ugly
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vote up 3 vote down

Tools -> Attach To Process - easy to forget, but with it I can debug script in web pages, managed code loaded up in another process (think an add-in model), or even unmanaged code. Be careful with letting it automatically pick the type of debugging you're interested in.

Tracepoints (and other breakpoint features... right click on the breakpoint and have fun)! - http://blogs.msdn.com/saraford/archive/2008/06/13/did-you-know-you-can-use-tracepoints-to-log-printf-or-console-writeline-info-without-editing-your-code-237.aspx

The immediate window is awesome.

Remote Debugging is very useful if you deploy apps (and can get to the machine where the problem can be reproduced).

There are tons more. Try getting into WinDbg and SoS!

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Unfortunately, I just learned that these don't work for Express edition. – Michael Haren Apr 21 at 12:05
vote up 3 vote down

.load sos in the Immediate window :)

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can u explain this? – Ante Nov 18 at 3:31
What's explain? There are tons of pages on the internet explaining how to use SOS. – leppie Nov 18 at 5:23
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I found the Modules window useful a lot of times. It tells whether the debugger has loaded a required dll and which version of the dll is loaded. It also lets you manually load or unload a dll.

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vote up 1 vote down

Conditional breaks are very useful if you have code that is repeated a lot but only fails under a specific set of conditions, such as code in a loop, methods called from a loop, or methods called from multiple threads. Put the break statement at the line of interest and set its conditions to match the error case. (There is a quick example here.)

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vote up 1 vote down

Two from me: one that I hope everyone uses all over the place:

Debug.Assert(<condition>, <message>)

the second DebuggerHidden:

<DebuggerHidden()> _
Public Sub ReadDocumentProperty(ByVal propertyName As String, ByRef PropVal As Integer, ByVal DefaultVal As Integer)
    Try
        Dim prop As Office.DocumentProperty
        prop = CustomProps.Item(propertyName)
        PropVal = CType(prop.Value, Integer)
    Catch
        PropVal = DefaultVal
    End Try
End Sub

Even if you have Debug, Exceptions, Break on thrown exceptions set, exceptions in here will not be caught.

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