17

I want to temporarily disable a breakpoint for a short time, so I set a conditional breakpoint with the following condition:

(global::System.DateTime.Now<new global::System.DateTime(2014,03,28,11,0,0))

When this breakpoint is hit a dialog pops up, saying

The condition for a breakpoint failed to execute. The condition was 
'(global::System.DateTime.Now<new
global::System.DateTime(2014,03,28,11,0,0))'. The error returned was
'The runtime has refused to evaluate the expression at this time.'. Click
OK to stop at this breakpoint.

Why has the runtime refused to evaluate the expression?

What can I do to get the desired behavior without modifying the debugged source code?

mbx
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2 Answers2

23

From VS2012 on, you have to switch to the Managed Compatibility Mode, to use conditional breakpoints. Why (sorry, no more why from MS since that link is broken.. I added link to archive.org) and how is described here:

switching-to-managed-compatibility-mode-in-visual-studio-2013

old Microsoft link, now dead

the original Microsoft article on archive.org

thewhiteambit
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-2

It's not possible as far as I know. What you can do instead is use of HitCount

or hardcode with a timer (as you like) in C# code

#if DEBUG 
  if(System.Diagnostics.Debugger.IsAttached)
     System.Diagnostics.Debugger.Break();
#endif
Tigran
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  • hard coding is not an option as you cannot change the behavior during a debug session, hit count would require statistical data upfront to have any timely meaning – mbx Mar 28 '14 at 09:52
  • @mbx: what behaviour are you talking about ? – Tigran Mar 28 '14 at 09:55
  • behaviour for a breakpoint - can change the condition at runtime during a debug session - just break, change the condition for the breakpoint and continue – mbx Mar 28 '14 at 09:57
  • @mbx: _HitCount_ is best what you can basically afaik, for this case. – Tigran Mar 28 '14 at 10:18