Right-click on your website and select Attach Debugger. Locate your published website under Server Explorer -> Windows Azure -> Web Sites.
#VISUAL STUDIO STUDIO 2013 GETDATA CODE#
Live debugging in Azure After you’ve published your website you can also, using live debugging, step through the executed code line by line as if it was on your local machine.
Your publishing profile is now ready to be used and you can click on Publish to upload your website, without going through the Azure portal.
In the final dialog Create a site on Windows Azure, enter the settings you want for your new website and click Create.
In the next Import Publish Settings dialog click on New.
In the Publish Web dialog click on the Import button.
You can check your connection to Azure by opening the Server Explorer window, click on Windows Azure and you should then be able to see your existing websites and other Azure things.) (You need to make sure you’ve installed Azure SDK 2.2 and can connect to Azure properly.
Create a new Azure website from within VS There is no need anymore to open the Azure portal and create a website there before you publish it using Visual Studio.
and the Resolve menu comes up where you can select to include using System.Diagnostics to make Trace available. To quickly solve this, type Trace followed by CTRL + SPACE +. If you write Trace, Visual Studio suggests TraceMode and other things, but no Trace. One common example is Trace found in System.Diagnostics.
Open the Resolve menu when typing It happens once in a while that you haven’t included the namespace you need at the top of your file.
This is a follow up with new neat things coming with Visual Studio 2013. In an earlier article I wrote about 10 ways to get more productive in Visual Studio.