Update debugging macros overview in the docs.
Describe how the debugging macros really work since 2.9.1, i.e. explain wxDEBUG_LEVEL and NDEBUG instead of __WXDEBUG__. Closes #14435. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@71887 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
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		@@ -12,13 +12,24 @@
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@ingroup group_funcmacro
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Useful macros and functions for error checking and defensive programming.
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wxWidgets defines three families of the assert-like macros: the wxASSERT() and
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wxFAIL() macros only do anything if __WXDEBUG__ is defined (in other words, in
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the debug build) but disappear completely in the release build. On the other
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hand, the wxCHECK() macros stay in release builds but a check failure doesn't
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generate any user-visible effects. Finally, the compile time assertions don't
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happen during the run-time but result in the compilation error messages if the
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condition they check fail.
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Starting with wxWidgets 2.9.1, debugging support in wxWidgets is always
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compiled in by default, you need to explicitly define ::wxDEBUG_LEVEL as 0 to
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disable it completely. However, by default debugging macros are dormant in the
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release builds, i.e. when the main program is compiled with the standard @c
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NDEBUG symbol being defined. You may explicitly activate the debugging checks
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in the release build by calling wxSetAssertHandler() with a custom function if
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needed.
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When debugging support is active, failure of both wxASSERT() and wxCHECK()
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macros conditions result in a debug alert. When debugging support is inactive
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or turned off entirely at compilation time, wxASSERT() and wxFAIL() macros
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don't do anything while wxCHECK() still checks its condition and returns if it
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fails, even if no alerts are shown to the user.
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Finally, the compile time assertions don't happen during the run-time but
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result in the compilation error messages if the condition they check fail.
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They are always enabled and are not affected by ::wxDEBUG_LEVEL.
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Related class group: @ref group_class_debugging.
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