WebFund 2013F: Tutorial 4: Difference between revisions

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==Node debugging==
==Node debugging==


Node has a built-in debugger.  Start in by running <tt>node debug app.js</tt>, for exampleWill stop on first line of file; type <tt>c</tt> to continue.  Add a <tt>debugger;</tt> statement to get the debugger to stop at a given line of javascript.  Type <tt>repl</tt> to drop into a read-eval-print loop where you can evaluate JavaScript statements in the current context.  Ctrl-C to get out of the REPL.
Node has a built-in debugger[http://nodejs.org/api/debugger.html].  Start in by running <tt>node debug app.js</tt>.  This will stop on the first line of the file.  Type <tt>n</tt> to step to the next line of the file. Type <tt>c</tt> to continue to the next breakpointBreakpoints are set by adding a <tt>debugger;</tt> statement to the javascript source.   
 
At any time you can type <tt>repl</tt> into the debugger to drop into a read-eval-print loop where you can evaluate JavaScript statements in the current context.  Ctrl-C will get you out of the REPL.
 
For example, given the source
<source line lang="javascript">
var x = 5;
var y = 10;
 
debugger;
</source>
You can run <tt>node debug app.js</tt>. This will start the debugger which will stop on the first line of the file (<tt>var x = 5;</tt>). If I enter <tt>c</tt> node will continue executing until the <tt>debugger;</tt> statement where it will stop. From here if you enter <tt>repl</tt> you can execute Javascript in the current context. In the <tt>repl</tt> prompt if you enter <tt>x;</tt> it will return 5. If you enter <tt>x + y;</tt> it will return 15, etc.
 
More commands:
*<tt>s</tt> step in
*<tt>o</tt> step out
*list(x) show x number of lines around current line


==Brackets and Theseus==
==Brackets and Theseus==

Revision as of 15:04, 27 September 2013

This lab is not yet finalized

In this lab you will be learning the basics of debugging Node-based web applications. All of the following assumes you have form-demo setup and running from Assignment 1.

Browser-based debugging

  • Firefox: Tools->Web Developer->Toggle Tools
  • Chrome/Chromium: Tools->Developer Tools

Select Network tab to see HTTP traffic Select Inspector (Firefox) or Elements (Chrome/Chromium) to see HTML document

Node debugging

Node has a built-in debugger[1]. Start in by running node debug app.js. This will stop on the first line of the file. Type n to step to the next line of the file. Type c to continue to the next breakpoint. Breakpoints are set by adding a debugger; statement to the javascript source.

At any time you can type repl into the debugger to drop into a read-eval-print loop where you can evaluate JavaScript statements in the current context. Ctrl-C will get you out of the REPL.

For example, given the source

var x = 5;
var y = 10;

debugger;

You can run node debug app.js. This will start the debugger which will stop on the first line of the file (var x = 5;). If I enter c node will continue executing until the debugger; statement where it will stop. From here if you enter repl you can execute Javascript in the current context. In the repl prompt if you enter x; it will return 5. If you enter x + y; it will return 15, etc.

More commands:

  • s step in
  • o step out
  • list(x) show x number of lines around current line

Brackets and Theseus

Tasks

  • Observe the request and response for the app's home page (http://localhost:3010). Look at both the network panel (load the page after selecting the network panel) and the HTML DOM view (Inspector/Elements)
  • Observe the contents of the form submit POST request: how much data is sent to the server? Observe it both from the browser side (to see what is sent) and inside of node, particularly where the POST results are returned.
  • Look at other web pages!