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How to: Work with Stale CodeĀ 

This topic applies to:

Visual Studio Edition

Visual Basic

C#

C++

J#

Express

No

No

Yes

No

Standard

No

No

Yes

No

Pro/Team

No

No

Yes

No

In some cases, Edit and Continue cannot apply code changes to the executable immediately, but might be able to apply the code changes later if you continue debugging. This happens if you edit a function that calls the current function or if you add more than 64 bytes of new variables to a function on the call stack

In such cases, the debugger continues executing the original code (called stale code) until the changes can be applied. The stale code appears as a temporary source file window in a separate source window, with a title such as enc25.tmp. The edited source continues to appear in the original source window. If you try to edit the stale code, a warning message appears.

NoteNote

The dialog boxes and menu commands you see might differ from those described in Help depending on your active settings or edition. To change your settings, choose Import and Export Settings on the Tools menu. For more information, see Visual Studio Settings.

To enable or disable the stale code warning

  1. On the Tools menu, click Options.

  2. In the Options dialog box, select the Debugging folder.

  3. In the Edit and Continue group, select or clear the Warn me about stale code check box.

  4. Click OK.

See Also

Reference

Stale Code Warning Dialog Box
Edit and Continue, Debugging, Options Dialog Box

Concepts

Edit and Continue