C
Chip
Argh yourself. You are CLOSE to right. Debugging is something you do to
identify the problem SO YOU CAN FIX IT. I will obviously not be fixing IIS
even if I do figure it out. Yes, I obviously need to figure out a work
around, but my preferred solution woulld have been, "Oh, MS has identified
that bug and here is the fix". I am not looking forward to debugging a
platform I cannot see into and deals with multi-threading.
I did appreciate your help in telling me how to turn Casini off.
Chip
identify the problem SO YOU CAN FIX IT. I will obviously not be fixing IIS
even if I do figure it out. Yes, I obviously need to figure out a work
around, but my preferred solution woulld have been, "Oh, MS has identified
that bug and here is the fix". I am not looking forward to debugging a
platform I cannot see into and deals with multi-threading.
I did appreciate your help in telling me how to turn Casini off.
Chip
Juan T. Llibre said:re:Debugging would seem to be a little useless since, as I said, it runs
perfectly under Casini. The
problem is not with my code, but with the difference between IIS and
Casini.
Aargh!
The purpose, when you debug, is to identify problems.
If you debug the application under IIS,
you will identify what's causing the problems you say you have.
Isn't that what you want to do ? [ identify the problem(s)... ]
re:I can't be the first and only person to notice a difference between the
two environments.
No, but you may very well be the first one to refuse to debug an
application
which apparently is having problems running uder IIS.
You can't pin down execution problems via osmosis.
Juan T. Llibre, asp.net MVP
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Chip said:Debugging would seem to be a little useless since, as I said, it runs
perfectly under Casini. The
problem is not with my code, but with the difference between IIS and
Casini. It appears there is a
bug in IIS. I can't be the first and only person to notice a difference
between the two
environments.