Breakpoint2.Tag Property

Sets or gets a user-defined string identifying this breakpoint.

Namespace:  EnvDTE80
Assembly:  EnvDTE80 (in EnvDTE80.dll)

Syntax

'Declaration
Property Tag As String
string Tag { get; set; }
property String^ Tag {
    String^ get ();
    void set (String^ value);
}
abstract Tag : string with get, set
function get Tag () : String 
function set Tag (value : String)

Property Value

Type: String
A string containing the breakpoint tag.

Examples

The following example demonstrates how to use the Tag property.

To test this property:

  1. Set a breakpoint in the target application.

  2. Set various breakpoint properties in Properties/Hit Count dialog box.

  3. Run the add-in.

public static void Tag(EnvDTE80.DTE2 dte)
{
    // Setup debug Output window.
    Window w = (Window)dte.Windows.Item(EnvDTE.Constants.vsWindowKindOutput);
    w.Visible = true;
    OutputWindow ow = (OutputWindow)w.Object;
    OutputWindowPane owp = ow.OutputWindowPanes.Add("Tag property: ");
    owp.Activate();

    // dte is a reference to the DTE2 object passed to you by the
    // OnConnection method that you implement when you create an Add-in.
    EnvDTE80.Debugger2 debugger = (EnvDTE80.Debugger2)dte.Debugger;
    owp.OutputString("HitCountTarget: " +
                        debugger.Breakpoints.Item(1).HitCountTarget);
    owp.OutputString("\nHitCountType: " +
                        debugger.Breakpoints.Item(1).HitCountType);
    owp.OutputString("\nLocationType: " +
                        debugger.Breakpoints.Item(1).LocationType);
    owp.OutputString("\nName: " + debugger.Breakpoints.Item(1).Name);
    debugger.Breakpoints.Item(1).Tag = "My Breakpoint";
    owp.OutputString("\nTag: " + debugger.Breakpoints.Item(1).Tag);
    owp.OutputString("\nType: " + debugger.Breakpoints.Item(1).Type); 
}

.NET Framework Security

See Also

Reference

Breakpoint2 Interface

EnvDTE80 Namespace

Other Resources

How to: Compile and Run the Automation Object Model Code Examples