Debugging Preparation: Console Projects
Note
This article applies to Visual Studio 2015. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here
Preparing to debug a Console project is similar to preparing to debug a Windows project, with some additional considerations. For more information, see Windows Forms Applications, and Debugging Preparation: Windows Forms Applications (.NET). Because of the similarity of all console applications, this topic covers the following project types:
C# Console Application
Visual Basic Console Application
C++ Console Application (.NET)
C++ Console Application (Win32)
You might have to specify command-line arguments for your console application. For more information, see Project Settings for a C++ Debug Configuration, Project Settings for a Visual Basic Debug Configuration, or Project Settings for C# Debug Configurations.
Like all project properties, these arguments persist between debug sessions and between Visual Studio sessions. Therefore, if the console application is one that you have debugged previously, remember that there might be arguments from previous sessions entered in the <Project> Property Pages dialog box.
A console application uses the Console window to accept input and to display output messages. To write to the Console window, your application must use the Console object instead of the Debug object. To write to the Visual Studio Output window, use the Debug object, as usual. Be sure that you know where your application is writing or you might be looking for messages in the wrong place. For more information, see Console Class, Debug Class, and Output Window.
Starting the application
When some console applications start, they run to completion and then exit. This behavior might not give you enough time to break execution and debug. To be able to debug an application, use one of the following procedures to start the application:
Your application starts executing and runs untils it reaches the breakpoint.
Your application starts and immediately breaks at the first line of source code.
In a source code window, right-click a line and select Run to cursor.
Your application starts and runs to the selected line, or to a breakpoint, if the breakpoint is hit before the line.
When you debug a console application, you might want to start the application from the command prompt rather than from Visual Studio. In that case, you can start the application from the command prompt and attach the Visual Studio debugger to it. For more information, see Attach to Running Processes.
When you start a console application from Visual Studio, the Console window sometimes appears behind the Visual Studio window. If you try to start your console application from Visual Studio and nothing seems to happen, try to move the Visual Studio window.
See Also
Debugging Native Code
Debugging Managed Code
Visual C++ Project Types
C#, F#, and Visual Basic Project Types
Project Settings for a C++ Debug Configuration
Debugger Security