Auto-skip STL functions during step-by-step debugging in Visual Studio

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悲&欢浪女
悲&欢浪女 2020-12-24 14:43

During step-by-step debugging, I often use \"step into\" to halt at every line in the section that I am debugging, to see all my code that\'s executed.

But library c

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  • 2020-12-24 15:15

    You don't use F10/F11/Shift+F11??? Those are "step over", "step into", "step out", and there are many more that are useful. Much more usable than hunting for buttons, and you never have to take your eyes off the source code.

    In general you're well served by using keyboard shortcuts in Visual Studio instead of the mouse. Not just for debugging, but everything. Learn 'em, you'll love 'em! You probably can't learn them all at once, just pick a few functions you use often, get used to them, then start on a different set. It becomes second nature over time.

    Sorry that this is off-topic, but your original question was beautifully answered by the previous poster already, and I thought I'd help with something else :)

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  • 2020-12-24 15:38

    good question, the debugger constantly jumping into everything is indeed a huge slowdown and distraction during debugging. Luckily there's a solution:

    open your registry editor, navigate to

    HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\VisualStudio\10.0\NativeDE\StepOver
    

    (add \Wow6432Node after SOFTWARE if you're on a 64bit machine, this casued me headaches in the past).

    Add a new String Value (REG_SZ). The name is not so important, I used NoSTL for clarity and set it's value to

    std\:\:.*=NoStepInto
    

    This tells the debugger to not step into anything matching that regex so it will skip every function (global and class level) in the std namespace. By using StepInto you can add overrides for specific methods, and you can still use breakpoints off course. It's also handy to add some of your own methods that get stepped into often but of which you know the result by head.

    Here is a more detailed explanation, google on NoStepInto for more scattered information.

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  • 2020-12-24 15:38

    The answer is as above mentioned, but in case you use VisualStudio 2017 or it didn't work for you, then try the following:

    C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\Community\Common7\Packages\Debugger\Visualizers

    Open the following file with notepad or whatever you have:

    default.natjmc

    and add this line: <Function><Name>std\:\:.*</Name><Action>NoStepInto</Action></Function> The 'name' means the value of the registry key in that file and 'action' is self-explanatory.

    If you want to add the registry key too, (not sure if it is necessary), then you will find it here: \HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\WOW6432Node\Microsoft\VSTA\8.0\NativeDE\StepOver At least, that was the path in my case. It took a good hour to find these, so I hope that it will help somebody. Remove the 'Wow6432Node' if you have 32bit machine, as above mentioned.

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