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Tutorial: Learn to debug Visual Basic code using Visual Studio

This article introduces the features of the Visual Studio debugger in a step-by-step walkthrough. If you want a higher-level view of the debugger features, see First look at the debugger. When you debug your app, it usually means that you're running your application with the debugger attached. When you do this task, the debugger provides many ways to see what your code is doing while it runs. You can step through your code and look at the values stored in variables, you can set watches on variables to see when values change, you can examine the execution path of your code, see whether a branch of code is running, and so on. If this exercise is the first time that you've tried to debug code, you might want to read Debugging for absolute beginners before going through this article.

Although the demo app is Visual Basic, most of the features are applicable to C#, C++, F#, Python, JavaScript, and other languages supported by Visual Studio (F# doesn't support Edit-and-continue. F# and JavaScript don't support the Autos window). The screenshots are in Visual Basic.

In this tutorial, you will:

  • Start the debugger and hit breakpoints.
  • Learn commands to step through code in the debugger
  • Inspect variables in data tips and debugger windows
  • Examine the call stack

Prerequisites

You must have Visual Studio 2019 installed and the .NET Core cross-platform development workload.

If you haven't already installed Visual Studio, go to the Visual Studio downloads page to install it for free.

If you need to install the workload but already have Visual Studio, go to Tools > Get Tools and Features..., which opens the Visual Studio Installer. The Visual Studio Installer launches. Choose the .NET Core cross-platform development workload, then choose Modify.

If you haven't already installed Visual Studio, go to the Visual Studio downloads page to install it for free.

If you need to install the workload but already have Visual Studio, go to Tools > Get Tools and Features..., which opens the Visual Studio Installer. The Visual Studio Installer launches. Choose the .NET desktop development workload, then choose Modify.

Create a project

First, you create a .NET Core console application project. The project type comes with all the template files you need, before you've even added anything!

  1. Open Visual Studio. If the start window isn't open, select File > Start Window.

  2. On the start window, select Create a new project.

  1. On the Create a new project window, enter console in the search box. Next, choose Visual Basic from the Language list, and then choose Windows from the Platform list.

    After you apply the language and platform filters, choose the Console App template for .NET Core, and then select Next.

    Screenshot showing the Create a new project window with 'console' in the search box, and 'Visual Basic' and 'Windows' selected for the Language and Platform filters. The Console Application project template is selected.

    Note

    If you do not see the Console App template, you can install it from the Create a new project window. In the Not finding what you're looking for? message, choose the Install more tools and features link. Then, in the Visual Studio Installer, choose the .NET Core cross-platform development workload.

  2. In the Configure your new project window, enter get-started-debugging in the Project name box. Then, select Next.

  3. Select the recommended target framework (.NET 8.0 or Long-term support), and then select Create.

  1. On the Create a new project window, enter console in the search box. Next, choose Visual Basic from the Language list, and then choose Windows from the Platform list.

    After you apply the language and platform filters, choose the Console App template for .NET Core, and then select Next.

    Screenshot showing the Create a new project window with 'console' in the search box, and 'Visual Basic' and 'Windows' selected for the Language and Platform filters. The Console Application project template is selected.

    Note

    If you don't see the Console App template, you can install it from the Create a new project window. In the Not finding what you're looking for? message, choose the Install more tools and features link. Then, in the Visual Studio Installer, choose the .NET desktop development workload.

  2. In the Configure your new project window, enter get-started-debugging in the Project name box. Then, select Next.

  3. In the Additional information window, ensure .NET 8.0 is selected in the Framework dropdown menu, and then select Create.

Visual Studio opens your new project.

Create the application

In Program.vb, replace all of the default code with the following code instead:

Imports System

Class ArrayExample
  Public Shared Sub Main()
    Dim letters As Char() = {"f"c, "r"c, "e"c, "d"c, " "c, "s"c, "m"c, "i"c, "t"c, "h"c}
    Dim name As String = ""
    Dim a As Integer() = New Integer(9) {}

    For i As Integer = 0 To letters.Length - 1
      name += letters(i)
      a(i) = i + 1
      SendMessage(name, a(i))
    Next

    Console.ReadKey()
  End Sub

  Private Shared Sub SendMessage(ByVal name As String, ByVal msg As Integer)
    Console.WriteLine("Hello, " & name & "! Count to " & msg)
  End Sub
End Class

Start the debugger!

  1. Press F5 (Debug > Start Debugging) or the Start Debugging button in the Debug Toolbar.

    F5 starts the app with the debugger attached to the app process, but right now we haven't done anything special to examine the code. So the app just loads and you see the console output.

    Hello, f! Count to 1
    Hello, fr! Count to 2
    Hello, fre! Count to 3
    Hello, fred! Count to 4
    Hello, fred ! Count to 5
    Hello, fred s! Count to 6
    Hello, fred sm! Count to 7
    Hello, fred smi! Count to 8
    Hello, fred smit! Count to 9
    Hello, fred smith! Count to 10
    

    In this tutorial, you take a closer look at this app using the debugger and get a look at the debugger features.

  2. Stop the debugger by pressing the red stop button (Shift + F5).

  3. In the console window, press a key to close the console window.

  1. Press F5 (Debug > Start Debugging) or select the green Start Debugging button in the Debug Toolbar.

    Screenshot showing the Debug Toolbar with the green Start Debugging button highlighted.

    F5 starts the app with the debugger attached to the app process, but right now we haven't done anything special to examine the code. So the app just loads and you see the console output.

    Hello, f! Count to 1
    Hello, fr! Count to 2
    Hello, fre! Count to 3
    Hello, fred! Count to 4
    Hello, fred ! Count to 5
    Hello, fred s! Count to 6
    Hello, fred sm! Count to 7
    Hello, fred smi! Count to 8
    Hello, fred smit! Count to 9
    Hello, fred smith! Count to 10
    

    In this tutorial, you take a closer look at this app using the debugger and get a look at the debugger features.

  2. Stop the debugger by pressing (Shift + F5) or select the red Stop Debugging button in the Debug Toolbar.

    Screenshot showing the Debug Toolbar with the red Stop Debugging button highlighted.

  3. In the console window, press a key to close the console window.

Set a breakpoint and start the debugger

  1. In the For loop of the Main function, set a breakpoint by clicking in the left margin on the following line of code:

    name += letters(i)

    A red circle appears where you set the breakpoint.

    Breakpoints are one of the most basic and essential features of reliable debugging. A breakpoint indicates where Visual Studio should suspend your running code so you can take a look at the values of variables, or the behavior of memory, or whether or not a branch of code is getting run.

  2. Press F5 or the Start Debugging button. The app starts and the debugger runs to the line of code where you set the breakpoint.

    Screenshot showing the Visual Studio code editor window with execution stopped at a breakpoint.

    The yellow arrow represents the statement where the debugger paused. Code execution suspends at the same point (this statement isn't yet executed).

    If the app isn't yet running, F5 starts the debugger and stops at the first breakpoint. Otherwise, F5 continues running the app to the next breakpoint.

    Breakpoints are a useful feature when you know the line of code or the section of code that you want to examine in detail. For information on the different types of breakpoints you can set, such as conditional breakpoints, see Using breakpoints.

  1. In the For loop of the Main function, set a breakpoint by clicking in the left margin on the following line of code:

    name += letters(i)

    A red circle appears where you set the breakpoint.

    Breakpoints are one of the most basic and essential features of reliable debugging. A breakpoint indicates where Visual Studio should suspend your running code so you can take a look at the values of variables, or the behavior of memory, or whether or not a branch of code is getting run.

  2. Press F5 (Debug > Start Debugging) or the Start Debugging button in the Debug Toolbar, the app starts, and the debugger runs to the line of code where you set the breakpoint.

    Screenshot showing the Visual Studio Code editor window with execution stopped at a breakpoint.

    The yellow arrow represents the statement on which the debugger paused, which also suspends app execution at the same point (this statement isn't yet executed).

    If the app isn't yet running, F5 starts the debugger and stops at the first breakpoint. Otherwise, F5 continues running the app to the next breakpoint.

    Breakpoints are a useful feature when you know the line of code or the section of code that you want to examine in detail. For information on the different types of breakpoints you can set, such as conditional breakpoints, see Using breakpoints.

Mostly, we use the keyboard shortcuts here, because it's a good way to get fast at executing your app in the debugger (equivalent commands such as menu commands are shown in parentheses).

  1. While code execution is paused in the For loop in the Main method, press F11 (or choose Debug > Step Into) twice to advance to the SendMessage method call.

    After pressing F11 twice, you should be at this line of code:

    SendMessage(name, a(i))

  2. Press F11 one more time to step into the SendMessage method.

    The yellow pointer advances into the SendMessage method.

    Screenshot showing a debug session in the Visual Studio code editor with execution paused after stepping into the 'SendMessage' method.

    F11 is the Step Into command and advances the app execution one statement at a time. F11 is a good way to examine the execution flow in the most detail. (To move faster through code, we show you some other options also.) By default, the debugger skips over nonuser code (if you want more details, see Just My Code).

    Let's say that you're done examining the SendMessage method, and you want to get out of the method but stay in the debugger. You can do this using the Step Out command.

  3. Press Shift + F11 (or Debug > Step Out).

    This command resumes app execution (and advances the debugger) until the current method or function returns.

    You should be back in the For loop in the Main method, paused at the SendMessage method call.

  4. Press F11 several times until you get back to the SendMessage method call again.

  5. While code execution is paused at the method call, press F10 (or choose Debug > Step Over) once.

    Screenshot showing a Debug session in the Visual Studio code editor with execution paused after stepping over the 'SendMessage' method call.

    Notice this time that the debugger doesn't step into the SendMessage method. F10 advances the debugger without stepping into functions or methods in your app code (the code still executes). By pressing F10 on the SendMessage method call (instead of F11), we skipped over the implementation code for SendMessage (which maybe we're not interested in right now). For more information on different ways to move through your code, see Navigate code in the debugger.

In this article, we use the keyboard shortcuts, because it's a good way to get fast at executing your app in the debugger (equivalent commands such as menu commands are shown in parentheses).

  1. While code execution is paused in the For loop in the Main method, press F11 (or choose Debug > Step Into) twice to advance to the SendMessage method call.

    After pressing F11 twice, you should be at this line of code:

    SendMessage(name, a(i))

  2. Press F11 one more time to step into the SendMessage method.

    The yellow pointer advances into the SendMessage method.

    Screenshot showing a debug session in the Visual Studio Code editor with execution paused after stepping into the 'SendMessage' method.

    F11 is the Step Into command and advances the app execution one statement at a time. F11 is a good way to examine the execution flow in the most detail. (To move faster through code, we show you some other options also.) By default, the debugger skips over nonuser code (if you want more details, see Just My Code).

    Let's say that you're done examining the SendMessage method, and you want to get out of the method but stay in the debugger. You can do this using the Step Out command.

  3. Press Shift + F11 (or Debug > Step Out).

    This command resumes app execution (and advances the debugger) until the current method or function returns.

    You should be back in the For loop in the Main method, paused at the SendMessage method call.

  4. Press F11 several times until you get back to the SendMessage method call again.

  5. While code execution is paused at the method call, press F10 (or choose Debug > Step Over) once.

    Screenshot showing a Debug session in the Visual Studio Code editor with execution paused after stepping over the 'SendMessage' method call.

    Notice this time that the debugger doesn't step into the SendMessage method. F10 advances the debugger without stepping into functions or methods in your app code (the code still executes). By pressing F10 on the SendMessage method call (instead of F11), we skipped over the implementation code for SendMessage (which maybe we're not interested in right now). For more information on different ways to move through your code, see Navigate code in the debugger.

  1. Press F5 to advance to the breakpoint again.

  2. In the code editor, scroll down and hover over the Console.WriteLine method in the SendMessage method until the green Run to Click button appears. The tooltip for the button shows "Run execution to here."

    Screenshot showing the Run to Click button with tooltip highlighted on the left side of the code editor window.

    Note

    The Run to Click button is new in Visual Studio 2017. (If you don't see the green arrow button, use F11 in this example instead to advance the debugger to the right place.)

  3. Select the Run to Click button.

    The debugger advances to the Console.WriteLine method.

    Using this button is similar to setting a temporary breakpoint. Run to Click is handy for getting around quickly within a visible region of app code (you can select in any open file).

  1. Press F5 to advance to the breakpoint again.

  2. In the code editor, scroll down and hover over the Console.WriteLine method in the SendMessage method until the green Run to Click button appears. The tooltip for the button shows "Run execution to here."

    Screenshot showing the Run to Click button with tooltip highlighted on the left side of the code editor window.

  3. Select the Run to Click button.

    The debugger advances to the Console.WriteLine method.

    Using this button is similar to setting a temporary breakpoint. Run to Click is handy for getting around quickly within a visible region of app code (you can select in any open file).

Restart your app quickly

Select the Restart button in the Debug Toolbar (Ctrl + Shift + F5).

When you press Restart, it saves time versus stopping the app and restarting the debugger. The debugger pauses at the first breakpoint that is hit by executing code.

The debugger stops again at the breakpoint you previously set inside the For loop.

To restart your app, press the Ctrl + Shift + F5 key combination, it saves time versus stopping the app and restarting the debugger. The debugger pauses at the first breakpoint that is hit by executing code.

The debugger stops again at the breakpoint you previously set inside the For loop.

Inspect variables with data tips

Features that allow you to inspect variables are one of the most useful features of the debugger, and there are different ways to do it. Often, when you try to debug an issue, you're attempting to find out whether variables are storing the values that you expect them to have at a particular time.

  1. While code execution is paused on the name += letters[i] statement, hover over the letters variable and you see its default value, the value of the first element in the array, "f"c.

  2. Next, hover over the name variable, and you see its current value, an empty string.

  3. Press F5 (or Debug > Continue) a few times to iterate several times through the For loop, pausing again at the breakpoint, and hovering over the name variable each time to check its value.

    Screenshot showing debug execution stopped in the code editor with the 'name' variable highlighted and a data tip showing the value as 'fre'.

    The value of the variable changes with each iteration of the For loop, showing values of f, then fr, then fre, and so on.

    Often, when debugging, you want a quick way to check property values on variables, to see whether they're storing the values that you expect them to store, and the data tips are a good way to do it.

Features that allow you to inspect variables are one of the most useful features of the debugger, and there are different ways to do it. Often, when you try to debug an issue, you're attempting to find out whether variables are storing the values that you expect them to have at a particular time.

  1. While code execution is paused on the name += letters[i] statement, hover over the letters variable and you see its default value, the value of the first element in the array, "f"c.

  2. Next, hover over the name variable, and you see its current value, an empty string.

  3. Press F5 (or Debug > Continue) a few times to iterate several times through the For loop, pausing again at the breakpoint, and hovering over the name variable each time to check its value.

    Screenshot showing debug execution stopped in the code editor with the name variable highlighted and a data tip showing the value.

    The value of the variable changes with each iteration of the For loop, showing values of f, then fr, then fre, and so on.

    Often, when debugging, you want a quick way to check property values on variables, to see whether they're storing the values that you expect them to store, and the data tips are a good way to do it.

Inspect variables with the Autos and Locals windows

  1. Look at the Autos window at the bottom of the code editor.

    If it's closed, open it while code execution is paused in the debugger by choosing Debug > Windows > Autos.

    In the Autos window, you see variables and their current value. The Autos window shows all variables used on the current line or the preceding line (Check documentation for language-specific behavior).

  2. Next, look at the Locals window, in a tab next to the Autos window.

  3. Expand the letters variable to show the elements that it contains.

    Screenshot showing the Locals Window with the 'letters' variable expanded to show the value and type of the elements it contains.

    The Locals window shows you the variables that are in the current scope, that is, the current execution context.

  1. Look at the Autos window at the bottom of the code editor.

    If it's closed, open it while code execution is paused in the debugger by choosing Debug > Windows > Autos.

    In the Autos window, you see variables and their current value. The Autos window shows all variables used on the current line or the preceding line (Check documentation for language-specific behavior).

  2. Next, look at the Locals window, in a tab next to the Autos window.

  3. Expand the letters variable to show the elements that it contains.

    Screenshot showing the Locals Window with the 'letters' variable expanded to show the value and type of the elements it contains.

    The Locals window shows you the variables that are in the current scope, that is, the current execution context.

Set a watch

In the main code editor window, right-click the name variable and choose Add Watch.

The Watch window opens at the bottom of the code editor. You can use a Watch window to specify a variable (or an expression) that you want to keep an eye on.

Now, you have a watch set on the name variable, and you can see its value change as you move through the debugger. Unlike the other variable windows, the Watch window always shows the variables that you're watching (they're grayed out when out of scope).

You can specify a variable, or an expression, that you want to keep an eye on as you step through code—by adding it to the Watch window.

  1. While the debugger is paused, right-click the name variable and choose Add Watch.

    The Watch window opens by default at the bottom of the code editor.

  2. Now that you've set a watch on the name variable, step through your code to see the value of the name variable change with each for loop iteration.

    Unlike the other variable windows, the Watch window always shows the variables that you're watching. Variables that are out of scope are displayed as unavailable.

For more information about the Watch window, see Watch variables with Watch windows.

Examine the call stack

  1. While code execution is paused in the For loop, select the Call Stack window, which is by default open in the lower right pane.

    If it's closed, open it while code execution is paused in the debugger by choosing Debug > Windows > Call Stack.

  2. Select F11 a few times until you see the debugger pause in the SendMessage method. Look at the Call Stack window.

    Screenshot showing the Visual Studio Call Stack window with a SendMessage method call highlighted in the top line.

    The Call Stack window shows the order in which methods and functions are getting called. The top line shows the current function (the SendMessage method in this app). The second line shows that SendMessage was called from the Main method, and so on.

    Note

    The Call Stack window is similar to the Debug perspective in some IDEs like Eclipse.

    The call stack is a good way to examine and understand the execution flow of an app.

    You can double-click a line of code to go look at that source code and that also changes the current scope under inspection by the debugger. This action doesn't advance the debugger.

    You can also use right-click menus from the Call Stack window to do other things. For example, you can insert breakpoints into specified functions, advance the debugger using Run to Cursor, and go examine source code. For more information, see How to: Examine the Call Stack.

  1. While code execution is paused in the For loop, select the Call Stack window, which is open by default in the lower right pane.

    If it's closed, open it while code execution is paused in the debugger by choosing Debug > Windows > Call Stack.

  2. Select F11 a few times until you see the debugger pause in the SendMessage method. Look at the Call Stack window.

    Screenshot showing the Visual Studio Call Stack window with a SendMessage method call highlighted in the top line.

    The Call Stack window shows the order in which methods and functions are getting called. The top line shows the current function (the SendMessage method in this app). The second line shows that SendMessage was called from the Main method, and so on.

    Note

    The Call Stack window is similar to the Debug perspective in some IDEs like Eclipse.

    The call stack is a good way to examine and understand the execution flow of an app.

    You can double-click a line of code to go look at that source code and that also changes the current scope under inspection by the debugger. This action doesn't advance the debugger.

    You can also use right-click menus from the Call Stack window to do other things. For example, you can insert breakpoints into specified functions, advance the debugger using Run to Cursor, and go examine source code. For more information, see How to: Examine the Call Stack.

Change the execution flow

  1. Press F11 twice to run the Console.WriteLine method.

  2. With the debugger paused in the SendMessage method call, use the mouse to grab the yellow arrow or execution pointer (in the left margin), and drag the pointer up one line to the Console.WriteLine statement.

  3. Press F11.

    The debugger reruns the Console.WriteLine method (you see this action in the console window output).

    By changing the execution flow, you can do things like test different code execution paths or rerun code without restarting the debugger.

    Warning

    Often you need to be careful with this feature, and you see a warning in the tooltip. You might see other warnings, too. Moving the pointer cannot revert your application to an earlier app state.

  4. Press F5 to continue running the app.

    Congratulations on completing this tutorial!

Next steps

In this tutorial, you've learned how to start the debugger, step through code, and inspect variables. You might want to get a high-level look at debugger features along with links to more information.