Microsoft 9GD00001 ユーザーズマニュアル

ページ / 449
 
144
 
Microsoft Visual Studio 2010: A Beginner’s Guide
Key Skills & Concepts
 
Exploring Available Debugging Tools
 
Setting Breakpoints
 
Inspecting Program State
 
Solving Problems with VS Debugging Tools
M
ore often than we would like, our code has bugs. Fortunately, when bugs do happen, 
you have a lot of help with VS. This chapter shows you how to use the VS debugger 
to fix problems by setting breakpoints, stepping through code, and inspecting program 
state. There’s also a section on development-time tools to inspect the structure of your 
code. Beyond setting breakpoints, you’ll learn how to customize breakpoints and how 
to manage a list of breakpoints. Then you’ll see the options VS has for stepping through 
code. This chapter also shows you many ways to see what the values of variables are in 
your code and the various tools available for inspecting your code. First, we’ll start with 
some example code you can use to practice the concepts learned in this chapter.
Example Code for This Chapter
It would take many pages of code to show a complete program with all of the complexity 
of a real-world scenario, which might be hard to follow for the purposes of this chapter. So, 
the example you’ll see simulates the environment of a full application. When performing 
debugging, you’ll need to traverse hierarchies in code, where one method calls another, 
which could go multiple levels deep, depending on the program. The example code will 
have multiple levels of method calls so that you can see how to use VS to debug code.
Listing 6-1 shows the example code for this chapter. It’s a console application, just 
like all of the applications created in previous chapters. You create a console project by 
selecting File | New | Project, select the Console Application project, give the project a 
name, and generate the project by clicking OK. The application in Listing 6-1 calculates 
a discount for a customer, based on a special discount percentage for that customer and 
what that customer ordered.