I do use FirePHP and your project looks interesting to evaluate. Will
check it out in a couple of days. It would be more interesting if they
really are complimentary.
I think people who use FireBug's console API would be able to appreciate
FirePHP/formaldehyde more. However, I do NOT deny the fact that not
every project needs them.
--Bipin Upadhyay.
Andrea Giammarchi wrote:
So nobody here debugs interaction and nobody uses Selenium for application tests ... fair enough.
Would be nice to receive some response for those developers whose deal everyday with big/complex applications, 'cause here seems nobody i susing FirePHP or frameworks debuggers while numbers tell me the scenario is totally different.
Regards
Subject: RE: RE: [Formaldehyde] The Most Basic Ajax - PHP Error Debugger
From: ash@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
To: tedd.sperling@xxxxxxxxx
CC: an_red@xxxxxxxxxxx; php-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Date: Fri, 11 Sep 2009 15:39:12 +0100
On Fri, 2009-09-11 at 10:35 -0400, tedd wrote:
At 3:27 PM +0200 9/11/09, Andrea Giammarchi wrote:
That's a finished production site ... how did you debug during its
development? 'Cause Formaldehyde is for development, not for
production ... I guess you have implented your own error
manager/debugger, right?
What's to debug?
The site --
http://webbytedd.com/a/ajax-site/
-- uses a very simple ajax script, namely:
http://webbytedd.com/a/ajax-site/js/a.js
Outside of that, everything else is done in php, html, and css, which
is completely separate from ajax. I can create a very extensive and
complicated site using that simple ajax routine without any
alteration whatsoever. I don't need a debugger because I never touch
the code.
Now maybe I'm not getting it, but from my perspective ajax is pretty
simple. The point I'm getting at is that ajax is simply a method of
communication -- you send stuff and you read stuff. You don't need to
rewrite the US Postal Service every time you send/receive a letter.
Cheers,
tedd
--
-------
http://sperling.com http://ancientstones.com http://earthstones.com
I agree. I tend to reuse the same basic functionality whenever I use
AJAX. With some half-decent unit-testing, you can debug the Javascript
parts easily enough.
Thanks,
Ash
http://www.ashleysheridan.co.uk
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