Yes, I believe this is new in Snow Leopard.  But on Leopard and 
Tiger, only numerical addresses are available and to interpret 
those requires that you know the 'slide' of each dylib loaded, 
which varies from machine to machine.

Mind you, with the breathtaking speed of uptake of Snow Leopard, 
maybe that is good enough...

Paul Sanders.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Scott Ribe" <scott_r...@killerbytes.com>
To: "Paul Sanders" <p.sand...@alpinesoft.co.uk>
Cc: <cocoa-dev@lists.apple.com>
Sent: Thursday, January 28, 2010 2:23 PM
Subject: Re: Uncaught exceptions not terminating my app


> If you don't crash the app, you don't get the stack trace.  No
> stack trace = no clue about what went wrong.

Just yesterday I was working on some new code, which threw an 
exception, and
the logged message included the stack trace. Never seen that 
before, so I
assume it's new in Snow Leopard. At this point I have no idea 
whether that's
true for all exceptions or just certain types, and whether or 
not it
requires the developer tools to be installed.

But perhaps something to check into: examine logs for exceptions 
thrown by
your app...

-- 
Scott Ribe
scott_r...@killerbytes.com
http://www.killerbytes.com/
(303) 722-0567 voice





_______________________________________________

Cocoa-dev mailing list (Cocoa-dev@lists.apple.com)

Please do not post admin requests or moderator comments to the list.
Contact the moderators at cocoa-dev-admins(at)lists.apple.com

Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription:
http://lists.apple.com/mailman/options/cocoa-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com

This email sent to arch...@mail-archive.com

Reply via email to