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20:19
1
A: Xcode not displaying line number or exception in debugger output

rogTurn off your breakpoints. Up in the top bar, unselect the button labeled Breakpoints. You likely accidentally clicked on a line and enabled a breakpoint. Additionally, you can click on the button that looks like a play button with a line preceding it to continue the program execution. It is ...

With the breakpoints now off, the debugger output now shows the exception. However, the main display in the center of the screen is still not displaying the main.m file as it was before. Is this normal?
rog
rog
Post your exception...
*** Terminating app due to uncaught exception 'NSRangeException', reason: '*** -[__NSArrayM objectAtIndex:]: index 4294967295 beyond bounds [0 .. 12]'
rog
rog
Now post your code related to the array you're using. Stating the obvious, you're trying to access an object in an array with an invalid index. (Protip: update your original question)
The exception shouldn't be the problem however. It shouldn't be displaying this in the center, rather it should be displaying main.m itself. And if I try to use breakpoints, I can't see them in the implementation, which I do need.
Yes, that is true. However, this question is not about the exception itself, rather why Xcode is displaying this output rather than the normal one I have been seeing.
rog
rog
20:19
I understand what you're saying now. Interesting, I'm not sure why it'd do that. Try cleaning you're project, I believe I recall seeing a similar question where that was the solution. Cmd + Shift + K
That hasn't done anything.
Well, other than clean the project, obviously :P
rog
rog
Hi - I've not used chat much - are you here?
rog
rog
Ok, so cleaning the project was unsuccessful? Also try restarting Xcode.
That's been done.
Nope, still nothing.
rog
rog
I'm still here - just reading through other people reporting the same bug.
I'm unsure what it's actually displaying, it looks memory references on the left, but it's not the memory view.
rog
rog
You're still receiving the same screen, correct? And it reads 'breakpoint 7.1'?
Thread 1: breakpoint 7.1 *
Yep.
Although if I turn off breakpoints, it gives me a SIGABRT.
(And yes, I know SIGABRT means it's referencing an object which doesn't exists).
rog
rog
20:27
Can you explain what your code is trying to do during this error?
I can't actually figure out where it's happening past the method.
rog
rog
and perhaps enclose it in a @try { //code } @catch (NSException *e) { NSLog(@"%@", e); }
I'm pretty sure it's calling objectAtIndex (probably with the index of an MPMediaItem) and it's returning an unsigned integer, hence 4294967295.
rog
rog
Yes. Well, without seeing some code, I'm only able to give you semi-educated guesses heh.
It's fine, I fixed the bug. But that debugger's still not gonna be any different.
rog
rog
20:30
I must admit, MegaUltraAwesomeViewController does intrigue me!
And, as I'm sure you know, the debugger output and breakpoint management is important.
It was a playful name I gave it 6 months ago.
rog
rog
Most definitely, I'd be very frustrated if I was unable to use them!
I've grown as a developer since then, as I'm sure you can imagine.
rog
rog
Haha, I've got similar test project names as well. I'm still learning too, I'm sorry I couldn't be more help
That's alright, thanks anyway.
rog
rog
20:32
Ok, well, have a good one Gizmoloon, happy coding
Here is an additional thread relating to it... stackoverflow.com/questions/6333457/…
Uhg... uninstall/reinstall.
Another suggestion with various up-votes: stackoverflow.com/questions/5323529/…

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