Console.WriteLine does not show up in Output window

sark9012 picture sark9012 · Apr 19, 2010 · Viewed 166.5k times · Source

I have put some Console.WriteLine calls in to test, but they aren't appearing in the output box?

public static ArrayList myDeliveries = new ArrayList();

public mainForm(){
    InitializeComponent();
}

private void mainForm_Load(object sender, EventArgs e){

    if (!File.Exists("../../MealDeliveries.txt")){
        MessageBox.Show("File not found!");
        return;
    }

    using (StreamReader sr = new StreamReader("../../MealDeliveries.txt")){
        //first line is delivery name 
        string strDeliveryName = sr.ReadLine();
        Console.WriteLine("Test content");

        while (strDeliveryName != null){

            //other lines 
            Delivery d = new Delivery(
                strDeliveryName, 
                sr.ReadLine(),
                sr.ReadLine(), 
                sr.ReadLine(),
                sr.ReadLine(), 
                sr.ReadLine(),
                sr.ReadLine()
            );

            mainForm.myDeliveries.Add(d);

            //check for further values
            strDeliveryName = sr.ReadLine();
        }
    }

    displayDeliveries();


}


private void displayDeliveries(){

    lstDeliveryDetails.Items.Clear();
    Console.WriteLine("Test content");
    Console.WriteLine(mainForm.myDeliveries.Count);
    foreach (Delivery d in mainForm.myDeliveries){
        lstDeliveryDetails.Items.Add(d.DeliveryName);

    }
}

Can anyone help??

Answer

Zach Johnson picture Zach Johnson · Apr 19, 2010

Console outputs to the console window and Winforms applications do not show the console window. You should be able to use System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine to send output to the output window in your IDE.

Edit: In regards to the problem, have you verified your mainForm_Load is actually being called? You could place a breakpoint at the beginning of mainForm_Load to see. If it is not being called, I suspect that mainForm_Load is not hooked up to the Load event.

Also, it is more efficient and generally better to override On{EventName} instead of subscribing to {EventName} from within derived classes (in your case overriding OnLoad instead of Load).