Difference between revisions of "Debugging with Code::Blocks"
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Run the debugger until the breakpoint is reached. Right click the variable to set a watch in the Watch Window. | Run the debugger until the breakpoint is reached. Right click the variable to set a watch in the Watch Window. | ||
− | + | 'Notes:' | |
Breakpoints may also be toggled with a left click in the left editor margin. | Breakpoints may also be toggled with a left click in the left editor margin. |
Revision as of 12:13, 26 October 2006
Make sure that the project is compiled with the -g compiler option. This ensures that the executable has debug symbols included.
Keep in mind that you may have to re-build your project as up-to-date object files might not be re-compiled with -g otherwise. Please notice that for other compilers than GCC this might be a different switch.
Menu => Project => Build Options
Open The Debugger Watches Window
Find the line containing the variable to be watched. Set a breakpoint in a position that will allow you to observe the variable value.
Menu => Debug => Toggle Breakpoint
Run the debugger until the breakpoint is reached. Right click the variable to set a watch in the Watch Window.
'Notes:'
Breakpoints may also be toggled with a left click in the left editor margin.
Breakpoints do not work in constructors or destructors. They do, however, work in routines called from them. This is a GDB restriction, not a bug. So you could do something like:
MyClass::MyClass() { DebugCtorDtor(); is_initialised = true; } MyClass::~MyClass() { DebugCtorDtor(); is_initialised = false; } MyClass::DebugCtorDtor() { int i = 0; // Dummy }
...and place a breakpoint in "DebugCtorDtor" at the line "int i = 0; // Dummy". The debugger will break at that line. If you go step-wise then (Menu Debug -> Next Line; or alternatively F7) you'll reach the code in the contructor/destructor (is_initialised = true/false).
Last edited: MortenMacFly 02:52, 26 October 2006 (EDT)