On 10 May 01, at 11:16, Marjolein Katsma wrote: > Debuggers are a wonderful invention - and I use them. But you don't > need them (need to *pay* for them!) until you've exhausted all > possibilities of displaying traces and variable values of your program > while it's executing. With Perl on Win - that's just what you need > your command-line window for: without it (or a debugger): how do you > know what's happening?
my 2c (pretty useless AUDs but...): i would have to disagree pretty whole-heartedly with that (in the most friendly, constructive way i can manage :). I think almost the opposite attack should be tried. learn to use the debugger and use that first. if you can't get the debugger to give the information you require, THEN put in trace statements etc. the debugger has the wonderful benefit of not requiring any extra code to run, no modifications to code, no extra errors and no weird side effects. well almost. also, you can watch variables and expressions that seemed obvious when writing the code but now mysteriously don't work... a nice tip i read somewhere, was to always run the code through the debugger the first few times you run it (literally) to make sure it does what you think. very rarely do you spend hours on a problem when you point the debugger at it first. admittedly debuggers used to be too hard to use and way too much effort (gdb anyone?). but the current crop of visual debuggers are fantastic (eg VC++). the debugger in the activestate PDK is well worth the download, and seems to work for a fair while without costing anything :). - Tom (who wishes he'd learnt how to use the debugger -- and there'd been decent debuggers -- before he learnt to program, it would have saved me year's by now...) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tompaton (at) connect (dot) net (dot) au http ... people.connect.net.au/~tompaton