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I teach a sort of "lite" C++ programming course to novices ("lite" meaning no pointers, no classes, just plain old C, plus references and STL string and vectors). Students have no previous experience in programming, so I believe that using an interactive debugger would help them understand program flow, variables, and recursion.

The course is taught in Linux. Teaching them to use gdb is just overkill (they will not use nor understand most features). I just need something simple but easy to use: to see at which line the program is now, what is in the stack (local variables, previous calls, etc.). I look something similar to old Turbo Pascal or Turbo C++ Borland's debugger, or Visual Studio debugger.

Thank you,

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  • 4
    I don't get the rationale of teaching C++ without classes. But I recognize the effort... Of teaching I mean :-)
    – m-ric
    Sep 17, 2013 at 20:18
  • 1
    C/C++ doesn't sound to me like a good option for total beginners... Feb 26, 2018 at 18:36

5 Answers 5

37

ddd is a graphical front-end to gdb that is pretty nice. One of the down sides is a classic X interface, but I seem to recall it being pretty intuitive.

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    DDD really is a great frontend. I used to teach C++. My students never could understand how to use gdb, but after showing them a quick tour of ddd (just the very basics, and telling them to compile with -g) they quickly became much more proficient at debugging their code and understanding what happened. The UI might look "old and dated", but why fix what obviously works?
    – wasatz
    May 5, 2010 at 14:39
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    ddd has one of the ugliest UIs I'd ever seen imgur.com/UFTBjnW Mar 6, 2013 at 13:13
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    although I've used ddd a lot for C, it has fairly poor support for vectors and std:: things in general. It regularly requires that I provide the mangled name of something to set up a breakpoint, too. I wouldn't recommend it for students doing their first C++ steps.
    – PypeBros
    Jun 29, 2013 at 8:43
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    DDD is great for inspecting data structures because you can lay them out on a big desk and see them how they point to each other and stuff. But it's true that it's only useful for C-style (no STL, pointers everywhere) data. May 16, 2014 at 1:34
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    That thing is like 17 years old.
    – Rolf
    Feb 11, 2018 at 4:09
26

You could try using Insight a graphical front-end for gdb written by Red Hat Or if you use GNOME desktop environment, you can also try Nemiver.

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    Insight is so awesome but it was removed from Debian and I can't install it on my Linux.. I don't know who's responsible, but he entered my list of mortal enemies and if I encounter him he'll face my wrath! Any-who; there's still a way to get it running but the UI is a little screwed-up: baptiste-wicht.com/2012/01/… Nov 7, 2012 at 9:03
  • @SamuelLampa apt-get install nemiver May 24, 2013 at 6:16
  • @MasterMastic, it was removed because nobody maintained it, I guess. Don’t worry, you can take it over!
    – andrewsh
    Jun 26, 2020 at 12:46
16

You may want to check out Eclipse CDT. It provides a C/C++ IDE that runs on multiple platforms (e.g. Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, etc.). Debugging with Eclipse CDT is comparable to using other tools such as Visual Studio.

You can check out the Eclipse CDT Debug tutorial that also includes a number of screenshots.

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    Dude, students will take weeks to just learn Eclipse.
    – MrFox
    Aug 14, 2012 at 15:13
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    -1 for recommending Eclipse
    – Celeritas
    Oct 4, 2013 at 8:04
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    I will not -1 points but IDE sucks. Jan 18, 2014 at 12:41
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    And since you guys complain so much, what do you recommend? code::blocks which hasn't been updated for 3 years now?
    – JohnJohn
    May 11, 2015 at 19:35
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    Eclipse is great for Java, but it's pretty bad for C/C++...
    – user837703
    Jun 11, 2015 at 15:23
15

Qt Creator, apart from other goodies, also has a good debugger integration, for CDB, GDB and the Symnbian debugger, on all supported platforms. You don't need to use Qt to use the Qt Creator IDE, nor do you need to use QMake - it also has CMake integration, although QMake is very easy to use.

You may want to use Qt Creator as the IDE to teach programming with, consider it has some good features:

  • Very smart and advanced C++ editor
  • Project and build management tools
  • QMake and CMake integration
  • Integrated, context-sensitive help system
  • Excellent visual debugger (CDB, GDB and Symbian)
  • Supports GCC and VC++
  • Rapid code navigation tools
  • Supports Windows, Linux and Mac OS X
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  • Does it support debugging small programs that don't have project files? I remember using it for my larger program, but the first setup was pretty painful, although the IDE is very good.
    – syockit
    Jan 8, 2015 at 14:11
13

Perhaps it is indirect to gdb (because it's an IDE), but my recommendations would be KDevelop. Being quite spoiled with Visual Studio's debugger (professionally at work for many years), I've so far felt the most comfortable debugging in KDevelop (as hobby at home, because I could not afford Visual Studio for personal use - until Express Edition came out). It does "look something similar to" Visual Studio compared to other IDE's I've experimented with (including Eclipse CDT) when it comes to debugging step-through, step-in, etc (placing break points is a bit awkward because I don't like to use mouse too much when coding, but it's not difficult).