On 23 nov, 23:19, Javier Guerra Giraldez <jav...@guerrag.com> wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 23, 2010 at 3:48 PM, Markus Barth
>
> <naturalparkdelseg...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > I am using quite a lot of asynchronous calls for updating a page. The
> > problem is that this way you never see a traceback. In turbogears the
> > development server prints all tracebacks to the terminal. Is there any
> > way to get a similar behaviour with django?
>
> firebug can show the content of any request/response, including AJAX
> ones.  it also renders any HTML content, like those generated by the
> Django error pages
>
> --
> Javier

This is only helpful if the request is answerered by the server, but
as soon as you have an exception, all you see on the console is a 500
Error and Firebug  tells you "status: aborted"

For example I have just spend an hour chasing a bug just to find out
that syncdb didn't sync a table. With a traceback I would have seen
the problem within seconds

Anyway, thanks for the hint

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