Sign In / Register
Blog, Steven Roussey, Blog!
Blog, Steven Roussey, Blog!
Blog, Steven Roussey, Blog!
»
Article
Tags
debugging
dojo
extjs
ide
illumination
Archives
May 2012
January 2012
November 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
Illumination and ExtJS
a year ago
by
sroussey
Tags
debugging
extjs
illumination
Firebug 1.6 is almost ready for release, and before it goes final I want a few more people to start using, playing with, and testing my extension to Firebug 1.6 called Illumination for Developers:
www.illumination-for-developers.com
It makes Firebug know all about ExtJS. And it is very very handy, and so let's discuss a few of the features:
Object Naming
It presents ExtJS objects in a smarter way. It recognizes what they are and shows the whole name, like "Ext.DataView" instead of "Object" in the console and the other Firebug panels. And instead of random properties being appended, it looks for a ID-ish and a Value-ish property to show. This gives you an idea what you are looking at when you are debugging. See the example without and with Illumination:
Element Highlighting
Now, when you hover the mouse over the Ext.DataView above, it will highlight the component on the page. In the case above, the coder didn't give a descriptive itemId or name, so hovering over it does the trick -- it shows you exactly what that object is all about. This works for Ext Components and for Ext Elements. It even works for Ext Composite Elements -- it highlights all of its nodes on the page!
Contextual Menu
When you right click on an element in Firefox, Firebug adds an "Inspect Element" menu item to open Firebug and bring you to that element in the HTML panel. Illumination does the same sort of thing, but tries to find the best match: ideally some sort of UI widget, else an Ext Element.
Illumination Panel
There is a new panel added to Firebug called Illumination, and when you use the contextual menu above, this is where it brings you. The Illumination panel is the place to inspect ExtJS objects: Widgets (usually derived from Ext.Component, but not always), Data (Ext stores, records, fields), and Elements (Ext.Element and its brethren). These views show the
hierarchical structure of your code:
It really takes some playing around with all of the above to get a feel of how useful and fun debugging can be again.
Try this example page
and look at the DataView, inspect the Store (use the side panel to see its records!), and generally browse around. Have fun!
Comments
«
»
No Comments Posted Yet!
Comments have not been posted yet on this blog
Blog, Steven Roussey, Blog!
»
Article
Copyright © 2010
Steven Roussey
. All Rights Reserved. Powered by
AppCenter™
.