| T O P I C    R E V I E W | 
               
              
                | .oisyn | 
                Posted - Jul 26 2010 : 12:14:23 PM  I'm seeing this in a project of ours. Somewhere I type the following:
 
  
  Those are valid entries, but this is nowhere near the complete list, which consists of roughly 40 entries, all beginning with g_cdcScene_. But that's ok, since I assume this is a reduced list which definitions I'm most likely to use at that point.
  So, I press ctrl-space. The list now shows this:
 
  
  I'm flabbergasted. Where are all the variables I can use? The three from the previous list aren't even in there, and instead it shows a suggestion that doesn't even begin with the characters that I've typed.
  I can't really reproduce this in an isolated case, but it is 100% reproducable in this particular case, even after restarting the IDE and updating to a newer VAX. I'm using VAX 1827 (above screenshots are made with 1810) | 
               
              
                | 7   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First) | 
               
              
                | support | 
                Posted - Sep 20 2010 : 10:16:00 PM  case=48025 is fixed in build 1832 | 
               
              
                | accord | 
                Posted - Jul 30 2010 : 03:59:02 AM  I am seeing the same effect here. Thank you for the very clear description.
  case=48025 | 
               
              
                | .oisyn | 
                Posted - Jul 28 2010 : 06:30:52 AM  Oh, as a matter of fact, the macros don't have anything to do with it.
 int prefix_option4;
int prefix_option5;
int prefix_option6;
	
int main()
{
	prefix_
} Same problem. Looks like ctrl-space isn't working in general for globals. If the variables are in a class or namespace, and you type Foo::prefix_ <ctrl-space>, it shows the variables correctly.
  Also, without the namespace, if you type ::prefix_ it is also incorrect.
  Within a namespace (without explicitely specifying the namespace) it works correctly as well:
 namespace Test
{
	int prefix_option4;
	int prefix_option5;
	int prefix_option6;
	int main()
	{
		prefix_
	}
}
  So the bug seems to be only applicable to symbols in the global namespace. | 
               
              
                | .oisyn | 
                Posted - Jul 28 2010 : 06:26:09 AM  I managed to produce an isolated testcase! :)
 
 #if _DEBUG
template<class T>
class Option
{
public:
	void SomeMember();
};
#define OPTION_DECL(type, var, value)	\	extern Option<type> var; \	typedef type var##_type; \	static const type var##_value = value;
#else
#define OPTION_DECL(type, var, value) \	static const type var = value;
#endif
OPTION_DECL(int, prefix_option1, 1);
OPTION_DECL(int, prefix_option2, 2);
OPTION_DECL(int, prefix_option3, 3);
	
int main()
{
	prefix_
}
  During the typing of prefix_ in main, it shows the list. Pressing ctrl-space will list other symbols nothing to do with those variables.
  Contents from default intellisense is turned off, and I have taken the macro limit steps (the original code had nested macros, but as this example clearly shows that doesn't really matter) | 
               
              
                | accord | 
                Posted - Jul 27 2010 : 1:26:29 PM  Is the following option turned on or off?
  VA Options -> Advanced -> Listboxes -> Get content from default Intellisense
  Can you please post the source of such a macro? (which generates variable)
  Have you turned off limitmacro by the following instructions? http://docs.wholetomato.com?W363 | 
               
              
                | .oisyn | 
                Posted - Jul 27 2010 : 06:26:45 AM  Up/down doesn't enlarge the list with other entries. The funny thing is, VAX does recognize the other symbols. If I start typing one of them, it eventually suggests to complete it. But when it does, after pressing ctrl-space, even that suggestion is gone and it finds nothing.
  .edit: hmm, perhaps a thing that's related to the issue: all those variables are defined by a macro rather than a normal C++ definition. And the expansion depends on the project setting - they are either defined as constants with basic types (int, bool) for final builds, or as class instances for debug and release builds. | 
               
              
                | accord | 
                Posted - Jul 26 2010 : 1:08:59 PM  This is odd. Ctrl+space should list all symbols, accessible from here. I tried this in some cases and worked. I'm wondering whether we could reproduce this problem, by placing thoose 40 symbols plus the erroneous symbol on the second screenshot to a new test project. The success should depend on what symbol names are available.
  Update: forget to add but you can press up or down arrow to get more suggestions. Ctrl+space lists all symbols while up/down often results in more appropriate symbol names. | 
               
             
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