Hello everyone!
Please do report crashes if you ever get one. We must catch every crash as they are the worst kind of bug.
On modern Windows it may look as if LFS has simply vanished. But there should be some more information that you can give me that can often lead me to the exact line of code that caused the crash.
That information may be found in the Windows Event Viewer. You can start the event viewer by typing "Event Viewer" in your search bar. Then in there you may find the information about the "Event" that was LFS crashing.
The sort of thing that I need to see is this lovely looking information:
That is just the best thing you can give me after a crash. Instead of being a nervous wreck of a programmer, whose program has just crashed without a trace, I may be able to find the problem and fix it!
Please do report crashes if you ever get one. We must catch every crash as they are the worst kind of bug.
On modern Windows it may look as if LFS has simply vanished. But there should be some more information that you can give me that can often lead me to the exact line of code that caused the crash.
That information may be found in the Windows Event Viewer. You can start the event viewer by typing "Event Viewer" in your search bar. Then in there you may find the information about the "Event" that was LFS crashing.
The sort of thing that I need to see is this lovely looking information:
Faulting application name: LFS.exe, version: 0.0.0.0, time stamp: 0x61aa28de
Faulting module name: LFS.exe, version: 0.0.0.0, time stamp: 0x61aa28de
Exception code: 0xc0000005
Offset Error: 0x000352fb
That is just the best thing you can give me after a crash. Instead of being a nervous wreck of a programmer, whose program has just crashed without a trace, I may be able to find the problem and fix it!