is there a way how to ignore VS2010 Java Script exception dialog which is shown when attached to JSCript running in IE.
We have ExtJS project and teher's some exceptions occuring in ExtJS we know about, but clicking 10 times Ignore is very annoying.
Thanks in advance
Use the following methods:
try/catch around the known exceptions
window.onerror for uncaught exceptions
Related
I created a simple UWP app from the VS 2017 blank UWP template. No added XAML or C# code-behind:
Create new app with Blank Universal Windows template
Set Debugger type to Mixed (Managed and Native)
Build and Run (No XAML or code added)
Following error: WinRT originate error - 0x80070490 : 'Element not found.'
This happens every time. Does anyone have a handle on this error? If I don't have Mixed Mode debugging on, I don't see the error but I'm assuming it's still there. Is this an error that I should be concerned about?
Thank you.
A lot of problem may result this error, and it should not be a fatal error in your case. Most likely you changed the default Exception Settings in visual studio.
Just like all other apps, Windows use exceptions and catch them at different level.
For end user, you should not see this exception and app should not crash.
In your situation, I think you click continue and the program should not crash, and it should not be a big concern.
I suggest you:
1, start and debug your app, open Debug|Windows|Exception Setting, then click the 'restore the list to default settings' button
2, restart your app.
3, You should not catch the exception, but you still see error message in Output window.
If you still see a exception window popup, you need to post more information like your os version, and then someone can help you
I met this error when I call the winRT api CommunityToolkit.WinUI.Notifications.ToastNotificationHistoryCompat.Clear(). Then let the app toast someting once the error had gone.
I just came across odd behavior with exception handling in .Net. (I'm using C# in MS Visual Studio 2008, but one question I saw here seemed to imply that what I see is true throughout the .Net world.) I am writing a plain WinForm application. I am intentionally causing an unhandled exception to be thrown inside a form_load event handler, outside of any try block. I get no notification. If an unhandled exception occurs in a normal method, a message pops up telling me that the exception happened, and giving me some information about the problem. But in the handler, the code just quietly exits the function without letting anybody know that it happened. If I add a try/catch block, the exception is caught as expected.
Is it true that this behavior happens in all event handlers? And is this expected behavior? And if so, is it because there is too much danger of bad things happening if an event handler unexpectedly stops?
Whether inside or outside VS, this behavior occurs when there is a debugger attached to the process. However, being a debug version makes no difference. If running outside VS without a debugger attached, the unhandled exception will fire up.
You can check
Why the form load can't catch exception? , and
VS2010 does not show unhandled exception message in a WinForms Application on a 64-bit version of Windows , for possible solutions.
EDIT: This behavior is only specific to the form_load event handler, as far as I know.
I am making a windows phone 8 application and in the designer view in both blend and VS I get "Unable to determine application identity call" error as a dialog box.
From what I read on stack this is propably because of the Isolated Storage is getting run and the designer can't handle it.
I am wondering is there away I can get some line numbers or something where the errors are happening instead of having to manually go through the code?
By the time you see this message box it is already too late, the exception was caught and handled. You have to catch it when the exception is raised. Which is not so easy to do at design time.
One technique that's worth a shot is to use a debugger to debug Visual Studio itself. Start it again and use Tools + Attach to Process. Locate the first devenv.exe in the list of processes and select it. Set the Attach to: setting to "Managed (v4.5, v4.0)" and click OK. Let it trundle to find the PDBs (takes a while). Debug + Exceptions, tick the Thrown checkbox for CLR exceptions.
Switch back to the original instance of VS and do whatever you did before to trigger the error. The 2nd instance will break in when the exception is thrown. Which some luck you'll see your code on the Call Stack window. If the debugger doesn't break then repeat the exercise but attach to XDesProc.exe, the XAML designer. Good luck with it.
Isn't this
Unable to determine application identity of the caller?
or
Getting Unable to determine application identity of the caller Error
are the same topic????
Don't know, just asking...
Sorry for any inconvenience..
Just answered in my basic question.
I'm afraid, i don't know how to get exact string number, just keep in mind that Designer cant have an access to the IsolatedStorage and check all places where you're working with IsolatedStorage. Basically, what you need to do is to add to all constructors a lines
if (ViewModelBase.IsInDesignModeStatic)
return;
If you're working with MVVM Light, or
if (System.ComponentModel.DesignerProperties.IsInDesignTool)
return;
which is pretty the same but without MVVM Light.
Also, i edited my answer there.
I'm currently (trying) to develop an app with Worklight Studio 5.0.6 and Dojo (Mobile) 1.8.3. I have a really hard time to to find a proper method for debugging. After waiting 5-10 minutes for the build an deploy-process on the server, an error usually looks like this in the Chrome debugger:
How am I supposed to track down this error in MY source? The whole stack trace consists entirely of Dojo code which generates an absolutely useless error message after 20 abstraction layers.
Seriously, how do you guys handle this in real life? What methods do you use for debugging Dojo-driven apps in the browser?
spyro
For dojo.parse errors, I find it useful to pause the Chrome debugger on all exceptions (the purple icon on your screenshot, should be blue). You usally get more details about the cause of the error, the name of the DOM node being parsed, etc. in the first exception being raised.
RĂ©mi.
Debugging dojo based application should be the same as debugging any javascript application.
Usually I will follow these steps:
add console.log() somewhere in code: this is fast and most of time this is enough.
set breakpoint in debugger: if step 1 is not enough, you can base on error information to set breakpoint before error line, then step in or step out.
comment out recently changes: for some error which is hard to find the error line, for example, parse error in your case, the good way is comment out your recently changes one by one till back to your last working version. Or, return to your last working version, then add code back one by one.
Create a simple application to reproduce the error : if your application is very complicate and it is hard for you to follow above methods, you can try to create a new application which mimics your current application but with simple logics and try to reproduce the error.
Based on experience : Some errors, for example, extra ',' in the end of array which works at chrome and firefox, will report a nonsense error information at IE. Debug these kinds of errors is very difficult, you can base on your experience or do a google search.
Did you provide isDebug: true in your dojoConfig? Also, try to see if the same occurs in other browsers.
Update: I recently discovered that there are issues with Google Chrome and Dojo debugging and I think it has to do with the asynchronous loading of files. As you can see in the provided screenshot of #spyro, the ReferenceError object is blank (which you can notice because of the empty brackets {}). If you want to solve that, reopen the console of Google Chrome, (for example by tapping F12 twice). After reopening the ReferenceError should not be empty anymore and now you can expand that object by using the arrow next to it and get a more detailed message about what failed.
Usually what I do in situations like that is to place a breakpoint inside the error callback (line 3398 in your case) and then look into the error variable ("e").
I am not sure how familiar you are with the Web Inspector, but once you hit the breakpoint open the Web Inspector 'console' and check for the error properties "e.message" and "e.stack" (just type in "e.message " in the console).
Also, during development it is better to avoid Dojo optimization / minification, which greatly improve your debug-ability.
Bottom line is to try to place the breakpoint before the error is thrown.
This is driving me crazy. I'm working on a C# Forms application that is crashing for some reason when calling _documentList.Items.Clear();. For some reason, Visual Studio never catches the crash and it acts as if the application closed without any errors. I'm in the debugger stepping through line by line, and as soon as I hit the _documentList.Items.Clear();, the debugger stops and the form closes. Please help!
Edit: I've found why the app was crashing, but I'm still not sure why the debugger isn't catching it. This should have been much easier to find than it was.
I was trying to update my GUI from a FileSystemWatcher event, so I had to use this.InvokeRequired and this.Invoke(). I'm no longer getting the crash, but I would still like to know why VS isn't catching this in the debugger. My understanding is I should have been getting an exception with the message "Cross-thread operation not valid:"
I think we don't have listbox.Clear() it shopuld be listbox.Items.Clear();
Have you checked if the listbox have items before stepping into the line where you are clearing the items.
Check the items count of listbox.
It appears that this is a known issue and has been fixed when using Tasks in .NET 4.0. See this question (InvokeRequired Exception Handling) for more info.