Reputation: 9862
Visual Studio remembers breakpoints from previous debugging sessions, which is awesome.
However, when I'm debugging, and I clear one of these "old" breakpoints by clicking on it, it's only temporarily deleted. What I mean is the next time I debug, the breakpoint that I thought I removed is back.
This is super annoying--is there a setting to make it not do this?
Upvotes: 226
Views: 35008
Reputation: 6137
Two steps (first is important!):
Shift + F5
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 13953
In newer versions of Vscode, it is called: Remove all Breakpoints
Vscode Version:
Version: 1.57.1
Commit: 507ce72a4466fbb27b715c3722558bb15afa9f48
Date: 2021-06-17T13:28:32.912Z (1 wk ago)
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 2657
If you are debugging a web application and set a breakpoint in chrome, VS code will honor that breakpoint and will not let you remove it. In other words the effective breakpoints is the sum of the breakpoints set in VS Code and in your chrome. And yes, sometimes it's easy to forget that you set a breakpoint in chrome and get lost in trying to figure out how to remove it from VS Code.
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 691
I consider this a design flaw, its very frustrating and something we have had to live with for a long time. We hit it so often that it just becomes the norm. The solutions given so far are really work around.
A better solution would be to get together and vote for a change on the Visual Studio User Voice. It seems like this has been logged a few times so we should pick one to vote up.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 7291
The problem is that child breakpoints of your breakpoints persist. Child breakpoints are created (in certain situations) when setting breakpoints during a debug session.
A surefire way of deleting a breakpoint (and children) is to manually look for it in the breakpoint window, and delete it from there. (Select the top node of the entry, hit Delete.)
If you're running an (old) version of Visual Studio that supports VBScript macros, you could run the macro posted here (between debug sessions), to remove child breakpoints. This will make removing breakpoints by clicking the glyph somewhat more effective and predictable, but it continues to be problematic and awkward.
Upvotes: 16
Reputation: 975
Go to debug > windows > breakpoints and find breakpoints and remove those from pane.
as It was answered here
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 4322
A quick alternative answer to this old question that just hit me with Visual Studio 2017.
If possible, just cut and paste the code with the breakpoint on it. The breakpoint goes away with the cut.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 49600
I was struggling to find the 'BreakPoints Window'.So here's the quick way to open it- ctrl
+alt
+B
Or you can manually go to 'Debug->Windows->Breakpoints' to open it.
Or you can hit ctrl
+shift
+F9
to delete all breakpoints at once!
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 7941
There are some answers here, but in my opinion proposed actions are distractive to use during debugging (I don't want to lose my focus).
My flow with sticky breakpoints during breakpoints is as follows:
During debug, DISABLE the breakpoint instead of removing it.
Possible ways of disabling a breakpoint:
Later on, during development, I remove a disabled breakpoint when I see one.
PS. It's also a good practice to remove all breakpoints once in a while.
Upvotes: 11
Reputation: 2496
Most breakpoints can be removed during debug-session, but some are stuck (probably a bug in Visual Studio).
It you want to remove only the breakpoint which is stuck, then use the "Breakpoints" windows found on the debug menu. There you will probably see that your breakpoint exist multiple times for the same row. Simply rightclick and delete it.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2985
Upvotes: 3