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I used to write lots of debug code in the JavaScript app and I’m looking for a technique that allows to get rid of debug code during the compilation/minification process.

Is there in JavaScript World some equivalent of compilation directives in C/C++?

In C/C++ it looks like this:

#ifdef _DEBUG
counter++;
#endif

PS. Currently, I use gulp

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  • How do you minify, concatenate your code? You could implement a transform in browserify for example that could remove console.log's but it depends on what you consider to be debugging code.
    – ste2425
    Mar 29, 2016 at 7:16
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    @zhe It depends on which minifier you're using. For example (one of many!) with grunt you may use strip-code task. Mar 29, 2016 at 7:20
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    If you are using gulp as your task runner. You could install npm strip-debug plugin and add the task to your gulpfile. I think grunt also has this option. Mar 29, 2016 at 7:20

3 Answers 3

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i think what you are trying to do is available using a task runner such as grunt or gulp. both of this tools are a task runner that convert your code, using plugin, to do this kind of manipulation.

such of this so called "plugin" is gulp-preprocess. this plugin doing what you are asking :)

for more understand of gulp you can go to the gulp site or find some good tutorials on the web...

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  • Thanks! gulp-preprocess looks very powerful. However, for my task, it has lots of redundant features. Since that, the best way to solve my problem is using something like strip-code (available for grunt and gulp). It’s simple and does exactly what I’ve asked.
    – zhekaus
    Mar 29, 2016 at 8:38
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strip-debug

Strip console, alert, and debugger statements from JavaScript code

Useful for making sure you didn't leave any logging in production code.

Also available as gulp/grunt/broccoli plugins.

Usage

$ npm install --save strip-debug

var stripDebug = require('strip-debug');

stripDebug('function foo(){console.log("foo");alert("foo");debugger;}').toString();
//=> function foo(){void 0;void 0;}   

Usage with gulp

var gulp = require('gulp');
var stripDebug = require('gulp-strip-debug');

gulp.task('default', function () {
    return gulp.src('src/app.js')
        .pipe(stripDebug())
        .pipe(gulp.dest('dist'));
});  

For more details check this: link, and this one for use with gulp: link

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  • gulp-strip-debug is good. However, I'm using AngularJS and gulp-strip-debug, unfortunately, does nothing in that case. I can't find a good alternative for AnglarJS app.
    – zhekaus
    Mar 30, 2016 at 8:20
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Probably academic, but here's an answer which is pure JavaScript. You can use something like this to strip some functions from your code completely, and depending on your compiler, will compile to nothing.

/** @const */
var NDEBUG = false; // change to true for production
var assert = (() => NDEBUG ? () => {}: test => console.assert(test(), test.toString()))();

If NDEBUG == true then assert becomes an empty function: () => {}, otherwise if NDEBUG == false, it takes a function as an argument, calls that function and tests the result.

Usage:

var divideByResult = function (a, b) {
    assert (() => b() !== 0);
    return a() / b();
}

This works like a C style assert. The function inside the assert only gets called if NDEBUG == false. We pass a function to assert rather than an expression. If we passed an expression, the expression b() !== 0 may have side effects and will be evaluated. This way, we guarantee that the expression inside the assert is never evaluated in production code, and an optimising compiler can safely remove the assert as dead code.

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