![]() ![]() This basically provides an integrated console - based on inline JavaScript - with full support for console logging output including deep object tree access for variables. The Web Browser control is essentially an embedded instance of the Internet Explorer engine, but it lacks any of the support (F12) tooling for debugging.Ī few months ago I posted a about using Firebug Lite to provide at least Console output to your JavaScript/HTML based logic. If this feature is important to you please submit feedback in Visual Studio via the Feedback → Feature Request option and let Microsoft know you'd like this feature back in VS2019 and beyond.ĭebugging an embedded Web Browser control in a Windows application can be a pain. You can continue to use these features in VS2017 and for this reason I keep my VS2017 installation alive. In Visual Studio 2019 Microsoft has removed the JavaScript Console from the product, so while you can still step through the code, look at the call stack and view variables, you can no longer view console.log() output, nor dynamically execute code or view console variables.
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