When writing for ASP.NET and, while the debugger is attached, if you visit a web page that throws an exception, the unhandled exception helper is launched at the line of code that caused the exception.
This occurs even if you only are catching unhandled exceptions and are not catching thrown exceptions. However, hitting F5, ignoring the exception, or not having the debugger attached does not cause the AppDomain to be torn down. Instead somehow ASP.NET handles the unhandled exception anyway.
How does this work, and can exception handling like this be implemented elsewhere so that other unhandled exceptions can be swallowed rather than kill the whole AppDomain or process?
Edit: To clarify, I understand how exception handling and try…catch blocks work. However, in this case it seems that the debugger is considering the exception unhandled while at the same time ASP.NET is wrapping the exception in a try…catch. That is the behavior I want to emulate.
asp.net just wraps executing code in whatever exception-handling code they want. asp.net webpage (or view, or controller) is just a class, and how to use it is entirely up to host (in our case, asp.net).
There’s a quote from MSDN documentation:
Which means that if you have “Just my code” enabled in VS Debug options (and it’s enabled by default) you’ll break at exceptions that are unhandled in your own code, irregardless of whether they are handled in your caller or not.
You can’t do that, it is a security measure.