Hi,
On Jan 8, 2016, at 7:28 PM, Torsten Bergmann
<astares(a)gmx.de <mailto:astares@gmx.de>> wrote:
Hi,
with a moldable debugger we should (in the future) be able to support
debugging also different/other programming languages/DSLs in Pharo :)
Yes. This would work quite well if the language would project on the AST of Pharo, like
Helvetia does.
- although usually one does necessary have such a use
case. So I guess
GTInspector or other will be adopted to own needs more than GTDebugger.
The debugger can be specialized for specific libraries or frameworks, not necessarily only
languages. For example, we currently have extensions for PetitParser, Glamour,
Announcements. I expect that every framework would benefit from a specialized debugger.
This would not be an odd behavior at all.
However:
The only objection so far is that I dislike the order/size of the panes.
The placement of the panes in GTDebugger (as for instance found in Moose)
requires often to use the scrollbars of the pane showing the stack because
of the text length.
In GTDebugger the stack is at the top left, the source at the top right with
a common splitter beneath the two panes: therefore the height (depth) of the
stack pane is always the height of the code pane.
When you have a long method to debug on the right much space is wasted for
a deep stack on the left although you might only be interested in a few top frames.
Contrary when you have are interested in a deep/full stack and you increase the
height of the stack pane on the left you directly increase the height of the code
pane and for short methods you waste a lot of space in the source pane as well.
This is much better solved with the positioning in the traditinal Debugger:
- Stack
- Source
- other
So in my opinion We should preserve:
- TOP: the stack at the top (using the full width of the window, so only vertical
scrolling
has to be done to "roll" on the stack, no need for horizontal
scrolling as the area
is wide enough)
- MIDDLE: the source code pane in the middle (also using the full width of the window
and there
fore in alignment with code pane in the the usual tools like Nautilus, change
sorter, ...)
- BOTTON: one or more panel for inspection at the bottom
It would be OK for me if others like the new layout better - but at least there should be
an
option to support the traditional layout as well (or support pane movemen/docking as in
other IDEs)
Thanks. We took this into account.
Also the debugger window in Moose wastes a lot of
space/has unused space within the
windows client are itself. For instance the splitters are very thick which might be an
issue of
the moose theme.
Thanks. We reduced the splitter size in Glamour.
Doru
Thanks
T.
Gesendet: Freitag, 08. Januar 2016 um 11:24 Uhr
Von: "Tudor Girba" <tudor(a)tudorgirba.com
<mailto:tudor@tudorgirba.com>>
An: "Pharo Development List" <pharo-dev(a)lists.pharo.org
<mailto:pharo-dev@lists.pharo.org>>, "Moose-dev Moose Dev"
<moose-dev(a)iam.unibe.ch <mailto:moose-dev@iam.unibe.ch>>, "Any question
about pharo is welcome" <pharo-users(a)lists.pharo.org
<mailto:pharo-users@lists.pharo.org>>
Betreff: [Pharo-dev] [ann] gtdebugger in pharo 5.0
Hi,
We are about to integrate in Pharo a new member of the Glamorous Toolkit: the GTDebugger.
As this is a significant change that might affect your workflow, here is some background
information to help you deal with the change.
First, you should know that the change is not irreversible and it is easily possible to
disabled the new debugger through a setting. However, please do take the time to provide
us feedback if something does not work out for you. We want to know what can be improved
and we try to react as fast as we can.
A practical change comes from the fact that the variables are manipulated through a
GTInspector, which makes it cheaper to maintain in the longer run.
While the first thing that will capture the attention is the default generic interface,
the real power comes from the moldable nature of the debugger. Like all other GT tools,
GTDebugger is also moldable by design. This means that we can construct custom debuggers
for specific libraries at small costs (often measured in a couple of hundred lines of
code).
Here is an introductory overview blog post that also includes some links for further
reading:
http://www.humane-assessment.com/blog/gtdebugger-in-pharo/
<http://www.humane-assessment.com/blog/gtdebugger-in-pharo/>
Please let us know what you think.
Cheers,
Doru
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