I'm trying to debug some code. When compiled with g++ it runs into an infinite loop with no errors (even when using fsanitize). However with Visual Studios it gives the error message "Debug Assertion Failed!" and "Expression: cannot dereference end list iterator".
Why would Visual Studio produce a runtime error but not g++? It would seem an assertion is failing from inside one of the used libraries. Does running the debugger in VS enable assertion within the libraries?
How do I find which line of source code is messing things up?
the headers that include the implementation are included with your compiler
but if you just set the breakpoint and run the program then you'll find the file, otherwise you can go looking to where they're stored and open them yourself
the container part of the STL is almost fully implemented in headers, there's no runtime library that you need to open for that if that's what you're lookin for
@Mgetz it doesn't roll up! if I have a struct of size 5 struct A { char a,b,c,d,e; }; struct B { A a; char b; } the size of B is 6!
it rolls up based on the biggest alignment in class A and B, this is what i noticed!
so if class A is 1 alignment of size 5 and class B has maximum alignment of 2 , class B will be aligned with 2 even if class A is of size of 5 if class A is 2 aligned and class B has maximum of 1 aligned variables (other than the struct A of course), then class B will also be 2 aligned
@ma1169 rule of thumb is a struct is aligned to it's most aligned member, the memory is determined by the alignment and padding of the submembers combined