I did find this code snippet, but it doesn't return true when I'm debugging:
[DllImport("kernel32.dll", CharSet=CharSet.Auto, ExactSpelling=true)]
internal static extern bool IsDebuggerPresent();
Yes:
System.Diagnostics.Debugger.IsAttached
You tagged your question as C#
so I'm assuming when saying "but it doesn't return true when I'm debugging" you actually talking about managed debugging.
The IsDebuggerPresent()
function checks for a native debugger being present. In your case you should use System.Diagnostics.Debugger.IsAttached
to check if a (managed) debugger is present.
Also refer to this blog post for more information on the debugger APIs.
The member of the .NET Framework that resembles IsDebuggerPresent()
the most is obviously Debugger.IsAttached
, but their internal workings are entirely different, just like Debugger.Log
works very differently from simple OutputDebugString
.
Debugger.IsAttached
asks the CLR for the presence of an attached
managed debugger, and never even bothers to check for the presence of a
native debugger. IsDebuggerPresent()
asks the kernel for the presence of an attached native debugger, and has no knowledge of managed debuggers whatsoever.As of Visual Studio 2013, the managed debugger is built on top of a native debugger, so both IsDebuggerPresent()
and Debugger.IsAttached
should return true when debugging a managed application under VS. But if you happen to attach Visual Studio to a managed application and explicitly override the code type to native, IsDebuggerPresent()
will return true while Debugger.IsAttached
still returns false.
In the end, it all comes down to what you are trying to achieve.
#if DEBUG
doesnt' guarantee that you're debugging, it just states that DEBUG is set.