I have a simple clean room example of this possible bug.
static void Main(string[] args)
{
bool MyFalse = false;
if (MyFalse)
{
throw new Exception();
}
try
{
int i = 0;
}
catch (Exception e)
{
Console.Write(e);
}
Console.Read();
}
If compiled in x64 or AnyCPU (when prefer 32bit is set to false in VS2012) the if you put a breakpoint in the if block, it is always hit.
We tried it in VS2012, VS2010 and VS2008 and they all fired the if block when compiled in 64bit, yet in 32bit it does not fire the if block.
We looked at the IL for 32 bit and 64 bit versions and they look the same.
We found this in production code because the if block was being ran and the exception was being thrown no matter what the value of the boolean variable, though in the simple example we cannot seem to throw the exception, it is happening in production code.
Since it is happening in production code, it is not just a debugger issue.
Very strange behavior, but seems to not be acutally running any code in the if block. Developer jumped the gun in assuming that was the exception he was seeing.
(All debugging is in debug mode - production is in release)
If the throw is commented out - the if block is not reached.
if
, is that what is happening?throw new Exception()
line as if it were executed, though it clearly isn't as no exception is thrown and it won't trigger a breakpoint.