85
votes

Suppose I have this function:

std::string Func1(std::string myString)
{
   //do some string processing 
   std::string newString = Func2(myString)
   return newString;  
}

how do I set a conditional break when newString has a specific value ? (without changing the source)

setting a condition newString == "my value"

didn't work the breakpoints got disabled with an error "overloaded operator not found"

11
I don't know if this is the intention, but your code is broken. Func1 returns void, yet you return a std::string. Func2 is not shown, but it probably doesn't return a std::string, furthermore you're using the == (equals) operator rather than = (assignment). - falstro
bad example on my side, fixed but the point was to illustrate the problem of getting a conditional breakpoints with std::string to work - Eli
Check answers down the page for other versions of Visual Studio. Kudos to @Rai for VS 2017+. An actual simple implementation to remember. - simo.3792

11 Answers

91
votes

There is a much easier way in Visual Studio 2010/2012.

To accomplish what you are looking for in ANSI use this:

strcmp(newString._Bx._Ptr,"my value")==0 

And in unicode (if newString were unicode) use this:

wcscmp(newString._Bx._Ptr, L"my value")==0 

There are more things you can do than just a compare, you can read more about it here:

http://blogs.msdn.com/b/habibh/archive/2009/07/07/new-visual-studio-debugger-2010-feature-for-c-c-developers-using-string-functions-in-conditional-breakpoints.aspx

50
votes

Some searching has failed to turn up any way to do this. Suggested alternatives are to put the test in your code and add a standard breakpoint:

if (myStr == "xyz")
{
    // Set breakpoint here
}

Or to build up your test from individual character comparisons. Even looking at individual characters in the string is a bit dicey; in Visual Studio 2005 I had to dig down into the member variables like

myStr._Bx._Buf[0] == 'x' && myStr._Bx._Buf[1] == 'y' && myStr._Bx._Buf[2] == 'z'

Neither of these approaches is very satisfactory. We should have better access to a ubiquitous feature of the Standard Library.

27
votes

In VS2017, I was able to set the condition as:

strcmp(&newString[0], "my value") == 0
20
votes

In VS2017 you can do

strcmp(newString._Mypair._Myval2._Bx._Buf,"myvalue")==0
8
votes

While I've had to work around this using something similar to Brad's answer (plus using DebugBreak() to break right from the code), sometimes editing/recompiling/re-running a bit of code is either too time consuming or just plain impossible.

Luckily, it's apparently possible to spelunk into the actual members of the std::string class. One way is mentioned here -- and though he calls out VS2010 specifically, you can still access individual chars manually in earlier versions. So if you're using 2010, you can just use the nice strcmp() functions and the like (more info), but if you're like me and still have 2008 or earlier, you can come up with a raggedy, terrible, but functional alternative by setting a breakpoint conditional something like:

strVar._Bx._Ptr[0] == 'a' && strVar._Bx._Ptr[1] == 'b' &&
   strVar._Bx._Ptr[2] == 'c'

to break if the first three characters in strVar are "abc". You can keep going with additional chars, of course. Ugly.. but it's saved me a little time just now.

8
votes

VS2012:

I just used the condition below because newString._Bx._Ptr ( as in OBWANDO's answer ) referenced illegal memory

strcmp( newString._Bx._Buf, "my value")==0

and it worked...

3
votes

@OBWANDO (almost) has the solution, but as multiple comments rightly point out, the actual buffer depends on the string size; I see 16 to be the threshold. Prepending a size check to the strcmp on the appropriate buffer works.

newString._Mysize < 16 && strcmp(newString._Bx._Buf, "test value") == 0

or

newString._Mysize >= 16 && strcmp(newString._Bx._Ptr, "ultra super long test value") == 0
2
votes

Tried to use strcmp in gdb8.1 under ubuntu18.04, but it doesn't work:

(ins)(gdb) p strcmp("a", "b")
$20 = (int (*)(const char *, const char *)) 0x7ffff5179d60 <__strcmp_ssse3>

According to this answer, strcmp, is a special IFUNC, one can setup condition like this:

condition 1 __strcmp_ssse3(camera->_name.c_str(), "ping")==0

It's pretty ugly, don't want to do it the second time.

This answer gives a much better solution, it use std::string::compare :

condition 1 camera->_name.compare("ping") == 0
1
votes

In VS2015 you can do

newstring[0]=='x' && newString[1]=='y' && newString[2]=='z'
1
votes

Comparing string works better than comparing characters

strcmp(name._Mypair._Myval2._Bx._Buf, "foo")==0

This works, but is very inconvenient to use and error prone.

name._Mypair._Myval2._Bx._Buf[0] == 'f' && 
name._Mypair._Myval2._Bx._Buf[1] == '0' && 
name._Mypair._Myval2._Bx._Buf[2] == '0'
1
votes

You could convert it into a c string using c_str() like so:

$_streq(myStr.c_str(), "foo")