does this mean, in the same way I have to have Google services or something installed, or only the related dll which comes with Nuget package will suffice
I would prefer to stay with Microsoft but the problem is my app is a tiny little one and I don't want to make it more complicated by asking the user to install another package
Wish it came with a DLL that I could include in the installation folder
However, I am not sure that Google approach is like that though either
@BradleyDotNET Yeah. I would be surprised if Windows Store didn't have that feature... Portable devices feed on these features
Well, yours was as simple as: 1. Click one of the methods on the linked documentation to see what assembly it was in 2. When that name wasn't familiar, see if there is a related SDK on google 3. Pause for dramatic effect 4. Post link :)
^^ good technique in general for finding what reference you need, FWIW
@BradleyDotNET I tried to use the assembly, but VS didn't recognize it. and it didn't look normal so I thought something must be going on. But that Google recommendation made me think I should be looking for it in Nuget however, it didn't look like that from the Article... I should've spent a bit more time before bugging you :)
@BradleyDotNET I will definitely follow these steps from now on
Hey all, I'm trying to adapt some Java code to my C# project, and I ran across this Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler subclass... is there any equivalent to this in C#? My web searching has not borne fruit.
I see examples for the exceptions themselves, like TempIsZeroException: ApplicationException, but not for a handler per se
The above is a catch all (for most part -- some system exceptions can't be caught) - it's the last step so you wont be able to recover your application state - but it can be used to dump contents to logs or email
A point of clarification, the docs say " this event is not raised for exceptions that corrupt the state of the process, such as stack overflows or access violations, unless the event handler is security-critical and has the HandleProcessCorruptedStateExceptionsAttribute attribute."
meaning, it's pretty useless if you don't know what you're looking for - and even when you do know what you're looking for, there's a 50% chance it's still useless with its hello world examples
MSDN really used to be this huge dump of basic class information that you'd use to figure out what to plug where - but you already knew what you wanted somewhat
Okay, so back to handling exceptions. I have a desire to handle [most or all] errors with some text that I set up in my catch() blocks that will then populate logs with useful information for debugging and troubleshooting
still, in my years of .net coding, i still dont know how to do securitypermission attribute and i haven't found a proper guide that tells me how to do this bit
(And maybe all exceptions is an overstatement, I'm mainly trying to handle ones that I'm capturing in a catch block, which can happen any one of dozens of places)
I doubt such a thing is possible, but without attaching a debugger to a java application, is it possible to have some collection populated with information about every exception that is generated in a java application, regardless of if it is caught or not? I know that in .NET, messages get gener...
PS: This pattern is so common that in WCF you actually have to be upfront wiht exceptions you're going to throw on server side just like you declare with throws in java
(by this pattern i mean catch exception - handle exception - repeat in other code parts)
I can see repeating a call to a central class/method/whatever that takes the logging/emailing action, but not implementing that logging/email action in every place I'd want to do it
of course thats just my humble opinion from very limited experience and I'll let more knowledgeable people offer better advice and learn in the process
Well, you're more knowledgeable than me by a long shot, so I'm not trying to be argumentative, just to get to a solution that makes sense and that seems reasonably implementable
You don't want a "catch all" that is supposed to handle everything for several reasons. (1) you can't gracefully recover, as has been noted. (2) figuring out where that exception came from sucks
like i wish i could know these particular users who had so much free time on their hands and intellect needed to cobble together some random actions to cause an actual failure in game engine
@Julien consider exceptions like disconnects on socket connections, or while reading input values from some external data source... you need to be able to recover and keep going from that 'class' of errors.... but there will always be errors for which you cannot be prepared, nor can you recover from
Ive heard talk about the performance impact of try catch statements.... and that keeping them to a minimum is a good.... but I don't actually know any of the technical reasons why that would be the case
My core question is "how can I make it work?". Having to guess at what syntax will bring about that happy conclusion is not something I can consider 'complete' in terms of answers
Sure, I'm generally not looking for a handout in terms of complete working code, just guessing a what combination of caps/lowercases and what objects with their methods will be the magic that will compile (and work) is not really that fun