This Bugzilla instance is a read-only archive of historic NetBeans bug reports. To report a bug in NetBeans please follow the project's instructions for reporting issues.
Summary: | Call Stack window: The tooltip for Hidden Source Calls node should have better explaination | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | debugger | Reporter: | _ sandipchitale <sandipchitale> |
Component: | Java | Assignee: | issues@debugger <issues> |
Status: | NEW --- | ||
Severity: | blocker | CC: | gtzabari |
Priority: | P2 | ||
Version: | 5.x | ||
Hardware: | All | ||
OS: | All | ||
Issue Type: | ENHANCEMENT | Exception Reporter: |
Description
_ sandipchitale
2006-09-20 15:37:46 UTC
I agree. com.google.inject.internal.InjectorImpl.getInstance() is ending up under "hidden source calls" which isn't something I want. It's not clear why this is happening or how to fix it. Ah. I figured it out. I had to manually add the guice source-code into the Sources tab. This seems to happen automatically for Maven projects but not for Ant projects. Another oddity is that when I invoked "Go To Type", "InjectImpl" before adding the Guice sources it would open fine. So clearly Netbeans knew about the Guice source-code but chose not to use it for the debugger for some reason. Please clarify what's going on. |