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What techniques (other than alert(message);) do you use to debug JavaScript/jQuery? Give particular attention to browser specific techniques.

Tools

FireFox

Chrome

Safari

Opera

Internet Explorer (I had to put it last)

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    I'd be shocked if this isn't a dupe but I can't find anything offhand.
    – annakata
    Oct 26, 2010 at 13:14
  • 2
    @annakata Found one I think: Which tools do you use to debug HTML/JS in your browser?
    – Yi Jiang
    Oct 26, 2010 at 13:20
  • One question: why it's JavaScript/jQuery, and not JavaScript/ExtJS or JavaScript/MooTools, or just plain JavaScript?
    – Mchl
    Oct 26, 2010 at 20:03
  • 'cuz that's what I happen to use. :)
    – Brad
    Oct 26, 2010 at 20:08

7 Answers 7

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console is your friend, available by default in newer browsers, and you can add a whole lot of debugging to IE with FireBug Lite.

For other browsers:

For demonstration/test cases, jsFiddle is also an excellent tool.

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  • Nick, can we make this a wiki? I can't figure out how. I want to get some responses and summarize everything in the question.
    – Brad
    Oct 26, 2010 at 13:15
  • @Brad - Users can't make questions a wiki, you have to flag it for a moderator to do so :) Oct 26, 2010 at 13:18
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If you're concerned about using console.log because not all browsers support this, it's easy to workaround with a couple lines of javascript:

console = console || {};
console.log = console.log || function(){}; //you can change this to do whatever you want, or leave it to just keep js errors from being thrown
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I love Blackbird. It's a cross-browser JS logging framework, with support for debug/info/warning/error.

You can display the console at any time with the F2 func key.

http://www.gscottolson.com/blackbirdjs/

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If you are looking for an alternative for alert(message);, it is console.log(message);

The requirement is that you need any modern browser or a browser with developer tools installed.

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More in testing than debugging domain.

Selenium - for GUI tests

JSUnit - for unit testing

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The Chrome Developer Tools are a direct descendant of the Safari (WebKit) Developer Tools.

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Refer to question for roundup of all answers.

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