On Dec 30, 2013, at 9:22 AM, Andrei Faber <[email protected]> wrote:
> Why debugging symbols are required to show full stack trace? MS .NET doesn't
> require that.
It’s sort of tricking you when you run it on the same Windows machine where you
built it. If you copy that same ConsoleApplication2.exe built by MS.NET to a
different Windows machine and run it, you will not see the detailed stack trace
either. On a different Windows machine from the one where I built your sample
code, I get this minimal stack trace:
System.ApplicationException: Error in the application.
at ConsoleApplication2.Program.Main(String[] args)
I’m not sure how MS.NET does this magic, but it’s really not important - I
expect you will run your code on other machines than where you build it.
Jonathan is right that the stack trace is also less detailed because it’s
inlined by the JIT, but this is also the same behavior as MS.NET. Disabling
optimizations would be necessary for either compiler to stop inlining.
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