Debugging javascript in ascx control - javascript

I am using javascript for an ascx control in my application.
I am getting some errors and want to debug the same.
I have put the debugger in my javascript and unchecked disable script debugging for internet explorer.
When my script is getting executed, I get the debugger launched, and when I attach the javascript (here it is in a separate file ), There is a message as,
There is no source code available for the current location.
What could be going wrong here.
I hope to get some tips on debugging javascript with ascx control

To debug Javacript embedded in a ascx control, you can use chrome explorer.
Here is the step.
Open the page that has the user control in it.
Press F12 on that page.
go to Sources in the "DevTools"
Find pages in the "Sources" tab
click on the page name that you are debugging.
you will see the source code in the middle pane.
your user control javascript is included in the page's source code, this is the key.
use Ctrl + F to find that javascript by the method name you want to debug
add breakpoints to that method and debug
Hope it helps.

To debug JavaScript, Hit f12 in your browser. This will open the developer tools in most browsers. (with Firefox, this assumes you've already installed firebug, which has to be installed separately as an add-on.)
Select the script tab, set your break points by clicking the margin to the left of the line of code where you want to break. If you are using IE, click "start debugging". Then perform an action on your page that will trigger your code. Happy debugging.

Related

chrome development tools - JavaScript code is not complete in Element

I was doing some modifications in javascript on some website in Google Chrome to see what changes appear on the web page.
What I observed that I am not able to see the complete javascript code on the element tab in developer tools. The same code exists on the Source tab able to modify that but those modification doesn't work at it doesn't work once DOM is loaded. This is the screenshot of what I am getting:
It is in HTML edit mode and this script is part of html page.... at
the end, it is not a complete script.
ScreenShot:
Is there any way to get it complete in element tab or any other way to modify script?
If you right click on the tag and select "Edit as HTML", you'll be able to access the whole script, without the hyphenation.
You won't be able to change Javascript code through the source tab and expect it to run your new code on reload. If you want to run Javascript on a website with Google Chrome Developer Tools, I'd suggest using the console tab and adding the code you'd want to run on the website. It won't save, but it's essentially the same as injecting Javascript to run on a website.

How to find a string that is used in javascript files in a web page [duplicate]

I'm working on a new client's website that loads Javascript from a CDN so the Javascript is not embedded or inline with the webpage source. I would like to pause everytime getCurrentPosition() is executed in order to determine which external JS file it is contained in.
I realize I could use other tools to do a string search through the contents of the JS files but I would rather keep to Chrome's debugging tools.
Should I be trying to create a watch expression or is there another way to pin down when and where a certain JS function is fired?
You can search in all files using Chrome DevTools. Find your function and debug it:
Open DevTools (F12)
Go to sources tab
Open Search All Files by pressing ctrl + shift + f (Win) or cmd + option + f (Mac)
Search getCurrentPosition
Put a breakpoint (By clicking the line number at the left of the line)
Open Google Dev tools(F12)
Press Ctrl + p
In the opened box search for all files(JS, CSS, ...).
In the box you have 5 options:
At the first select a file for using options 2-5
Type 'filename' and select it.
Type ':linenumber' to go to specific line number(':10' go to line 10).
Type '#symbol' to go to specific symbol('#TestSymbol' go to TestSymbol symbol).
In this option, if you write #JSFunctionName or #CSSClassName then the cursor
will navigate to the JSFunctionName or the CSSClassName.
Type '!snippet' to go to specific snippet('!snippetTest' go to snippetTest snippet).
Type '>googleCommand' to go to specific command('>Clear console' clear the console).
You can find all the information that you need at the webpage: https://developer.chrome.com/devtools/docs/javascript-debugging
By simply putting it (copied from the webpage)
Open a site such as the Google Closure hovercard demo page or the TodoMVC
Open a site such as the Google Closure hovercard demo page or the TodoMVC Angular app
Open the DevTools window.
If it is not already selected, select Sources.
Debugging with breakpoints
A breakpoint is an intentional stopping or pausing place in a script. Use breakpoints in DevTools to debug JavaScript code, DOM updates, and network calls.
Add and remove breakpoints
In the Sources panel, open a JavaScript file for debugging. In the example below, we are debugging the todoCtrl.js file from the AngularJS version of TodoMVC.
Click the line gutter to set a breakpoint for that line of code. A blue tag will indicate if a breakpoint has been set:
With the above simple example you can actually "stop" the function getCurrentPosition() and debug it.
One way would be to replace the Geolocation.getCurrentPosition method with a wrapper function so that you can set a breakpoint inside it, and then examine the stack to see who is calling it.
If you know where in the code the method is called you can set breakpoints. This will pause the javascript execution during runtime and allow you get a stack trace.

Chrome DevTools search all javascript files in website

I'm working on a new client's website that loads Javascript from a CDN so the Javascript is not embedded or inline with the webpage source. I would like to pause everytime getCurrentPosition() is executed in order to determine which external JS file it is contained in.
I realize I could use other tools to do a string search through the contents of the JS files but I would rather keep to Chrome's debugging tools.
Should I be trying to create a watch expression or is there another way to pin down when and where a certain JS function is fired?
You can search in all files using Chrome DevTools. Find your function and debug it:
Open DevTools (F12)
Go to sources tab
Open Search All Files by pressing ctrl + shift + f (Win) or cmd + option + f (Mac)
Search getCurrentPosition
Put a breakpoint (By clicking the line number at the left of the line)
Open Google Dev tools(F12)
Press Ctrl + p
In the opened box search for all files(JS, CSS, ...).
In the box you have 5 options:
At the first select a file for using options 2-5
Type 'filename' and select it.
Type ':linenumber' to go to specific line number(':10' go to line 10).
Type '#symbol' to go to specific symbol('#TestSymbol' go to TestSymbol symbol).
In this option, if you write #JSFunctionName or #CSSClassName then the cursor
will navigate to the JSFunctionName or the CSSClassName.
Type '!snippet' to go to specific snippet('!snippetTest' go to snippetTest snippet).
Type '>googleCommand' to go to specific command('>Clear console' clear the console).
You can find all the information that you need at the webpage: https://developer.chrome.com/devtools/docs/javascript-debugging
By simply putting it (copied from the webpage)
Open a site such as the Google Closure hovercard demo page or the TodoMVC
Open a site such as the Google Closure hovercard demo page or the TodoMVC Angular app
Open the DevTools window.
If it is not already selected, select Sources.
Debugging with breakpoints
A breakpoint is an intentional stopping or pausing place in a script. Use breakpoints in DevTools to debug JavaScript code, DOM updates, and network calls.
Add and remove breakpoints
In the Sources panel, open a JavaScript file for debugging. In the example below, we are debugging the todoCtrl.js file from the AngularJS version of TodoMVC.
Click the line gutter to set a breakpoint for that line of code. A blue tag will indicate if a breakpoint has been set:
With the above simple example you can actually "stop" the function getCurrentPosition() and debug it.
One way would be to replace the Geolocation.getCurrentPosition method with a wrapper function so that you can set a breakpoint inside it, and then examine the stack to see who is calling it.
If you know where in the code the method is called you can set breakpoints. This will pause the javascript execution during runtime and allow you get a stack trace.

How to find JS code is working in browser?

I am using bootstrap modal, I dont know where I have put the js code that triggers the modal after clicking the button.
jQuery('#signin').modal('show');
I checked each file...even checked each JS file in source in browser.
How can I find which code is triggering the event in browser when I am clicking the button to open a modal?
Use a developer tool for a browser which will allow you to perform Javascript debugging. Your best bet is most likely Firebug. If you set a debug point at a line within a JS file, firebug will allow you to inspect the stack to see which line has called the function.
Instructions
In Firebug, click the script tab.
Select your .js file using the drop down.
When the JS file displays find the target line and click to the left of it, setting a debug point.
Load your page, the script should stop at your debug point.
Click the Stack tab on the right and inspect.
Searching for Script in Firebug
If you click the script tab you can enter a known piece of the script in the upper right hand corner of firebug, this should take you to its location in the code.
I agree with Kevin, another option is to print the stack trace using something like:
http://www.codeovertones.com/2011/08/how-to-print-stack-trace-anywhere-in.html

Open firebug inscpector using javascript

From a bookmarklet I need to open firebug and inspecting an element.
I know firebug got a command "inspect" but it seems it's not possible to execute this command from javascript.
Firebug can be driven using the new firefox command line ...but it seems we can not execute command line from javascript.
If you have an idea?
I have a bookmarklet which finds errors in the HTML code. The bookmarklet lists all elements in error. If user clicks on an element, I would like to display it in firebug inspector.
Not sure what exactly you are trying to achieve here. If you are trying to debug your own code then use javascript "debugger" command to cause firebug to break on a given line of code.
If you are looking to trigger Firebug to open at an end user's browser then this would cause confusion for the user and also this option could possibly be a security risk.
Anyway if firebug is deactivated then it can't respond to anything so you wouldn't be able to do this.
You can open FireBug just by pressing F12 in the browser

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