Is there a way like how we debug models / controllers with logger.debug? Or even a better method?

Thank you!

Edit 1

Using ruby-debug seems like a steep learning curve for me, could anyone point me something similar to logger.debug, perhaps?

Edit 2

Alright, I think I started to get a grasp on ruby-debug.

Some useful notes for newbies to setup & use ruby-debug:

gem install ruby-debug
in config/environments/development.rb add

include 'ruby-debug'

then just above the code you want to debug add:

debugger

if you need to debug third party plugin / gem, use

include 'ruby-debug'
debugger

just use ruby script/server to run, no need to add --debugger

Edit 3

This plugin really helps me out in understanding the flow of Rails application. I highly recommend this to any newbies going pro!

Simply setup ruby-debug, then put debugger code anywhere in your controller under the action your application requested. You will then find great revelation!

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Yea, using a command-line debugger is definitely a learning process, and ruby-debug is certainly no Visual Studio/XCode/etc for debugging (of course, those tools do not work with Ruby--although I bet Radrails has a debugger), but it's a huge plus over printing/logging values. – wuputah Aug 29 '10 at 0:30
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1 Answer

up vote 2 down vote accepted

I highly recommend you learn to use ruby-debug. You can install it by doing:

gem install ruby-debug

You can then add a debugger statement to your code either in the plugin code or where your code calls the plugin, step through it, and see what's going wrong.

I also personally use these settings which makes it a bit easier to use - put them in a ~/.rdebugrc file.

set autoeval
set autolist
set autoreload
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I tried using it for a set of test script inside the plugin (by running ctrl + R in Textmate), it returned NoMethodError: undefined method `logger' for true:TrueClass what should I do now? – jaycode Aug 27 '10 at 16:28
You can't use Cmd+R from Textmate with rdebug - using the debugger is interactive, so you need an interactive prompt. Run your test script in Terminal with the rdebug command. You can also run it with plain ruby if you require 'ruby-debug' (rubygems will also need to be loaded for that to work). – wuputah Aug 27 '10 at 17:19
Here's a screencast which covers using ruby-debug in a Rails app: railscasts.com/episodes/54-debugging-with-ruby-debug – wuputah Aug 27 '10 at 17:20
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