How to debug web2py in IDE like komodo or some IDE tool?

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Roger Zheng

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Jul 3, 2008, 5:14:42 PM7/3/08
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Hi,

I want to know if there is some plugin for debuging web2py in IDE tool?

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Regards!

Roger Zheng

blackthorne

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Jul 3, 2008, 8:48:41 PM7/3/08
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pdb?

Massimo Di Pierro

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Jul 3, 2008, 8:54:01 PM7/3/08
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Roger Zheng

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Jul 4, 2008, 5:48:42 AM7/4/08
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Thanks, Massimo!

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Regards!

Roger Zheng

yarko

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Jul 4, 2008, 2:29:27 PM7/4/08
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I use WingIDE - the commercial version (the offer they made at
PyCon2008 was too good, and the demo was generous).

It couldn't be simpler w/ WingiDE --> you set project to the top of
web2py, and set web2py.py as the default debug starting point... New
files just get discovered (I included all files recursively for "the
project", and WingIDE seems to do this dynamically - very, very
handy).

I've used Komodo (for perl, other work) .... for Python-centric work I
prefer WingIDE. The guys are about as responsive as Massimo.

They have a free version that does debugging - but I'd try a trial of
the other versions (they say 30 day trial - but it's doled out in 2
week chunks, and as I recall they give you 3...). Another thing -
even though it's "commercial" once you buy, they give you access to
full source.

Check it out - see if you like it as much as I do: www.wingide.com

Cheers,
Yarko

yarko

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Jul 4, 2008, 3:16:12 PM7/4/08
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FYI - here's a review that asks "given Eclipse and Komodo, why yet
another IDE?"

http://www.ddj.com/linux-open-source/208402843

Joe Barnhart

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Jul 7, 2008, 8:57:00 PM7/7/08
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Did I read that DDJ article right? Three installs, and that's IT??!?
Wow, this is WAY over the top "defective by design". Think I'll avoid
that trap altogether.

Joe

yarko

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Jul 8, 2008, 12:08:00 AM7/8/08
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three activations is what it says --- so 3 separate O/S or computer re-
installs I think...

...funny how people rail at this sort of stuff, but think nothing of
buying a cell phone locked to a carrier

BTW - if you have a GSM phone, the carrier has to unlock your phone -
which they subsidised - once you've completed your contract per GSMA
rules.... So, would you call that "defective by design" too? Or
protecting from a huge theft / piracy market, and preventing billions
of losses? ;-)
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