Apple has a generic Javascript debugger, called Drosera, which is
bundled with the Webkit nightly builds (http://nightly.webkit.org).
They haven't released it with anything other than the webkit nightly
builds afaik. I believe it can attach to any application that uses
Webkit, and it can do on-the-fly script evaluations, set breakpoints,
etc... there's a bit more documentation here: http://trac.webkit.org/
projects/webkit/wiki/Drosera . I think there may have been a quick
demo of it in one of the WWDC sessions, if you have access to the
videos. I've only used the Javascript console in the Safari debug
menu so far, so I'm not too familiar with it.
Mike
On Jan 10, 2007, at 7:09 PM, Kevin Packard wrote:
On Jan 10, 2007, at 6:06 PM, Jakob Peterhänsel wrote:
Other than that, it's just a webpage, and as long as all the stuff
declared (css etc.) in HEAD is there, then you should be able to
use the stuff in the BODY in a normal page.
Please excuse my ignorance, but are you saying that DashCode could
easily be used to develop and debug Javascript web pages? If so, I
wonder why Apple hadn't made a more generic Javascript development
tool.
--
Kevin Packard
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