IE Tester has no console, and alert boxes seem to be ignored in this software. Is this expected behavior? If so, how does one go about debugging javascript using this tool?
I have debug bar installed, but it doesn't seem to do anything useful besides allowing me to look that the DOM.
I need to be able to check the state of various objects during script execution, but I don't know how to do this without a console or alert boxes. Any help is greatly appreciated.
IE Tester has no console, and alert boxes seem to be ignored in this software. Is this expected behavior? If so, how does one go about debugging javascript using this tool?
I have debug bar installed, but it doesn't seem to do anything useful besides allowing me to look that the DOM.
I need to be able to check the state of various objects during script execution, but I don't know how to do this without a console or alert boxes. Any help is greatly appreciated.
Share Improve this question asked May 13, 2011 at 1:01 Mark BrownMark Brown 12.5k8 gold badges29 silver badges32 bronze badges 1- 2 There's a reason that hacks like IETester aren't supported-- anything that pops native UI (e.g. Alert shows a Windows MessageBox) tends to break due to DLL version mismatches. – EricLaw Commented May 13, 2011 at 3:09
1 Answer
Reset to default 5Install FireBug Lite as a bookmarklet in your browsers: http://getfirebug./firebuglite
IE6+ support as well.