Prev | Current Page 342 | Next

L. McColl-Sylvester and F. Ponticelli

"Professional haXe and Neko"

It will complete
the first part of the book and you will acquire the basis to write real - world applications.
??‘
??‘
??‘
??‘
When Things Go Wrong
Okay, let ??™ s face it; all programmers make mistakes. In fact, most programmers make lots of
mistakes, and it seems the more experienced you are, the more likely you ??™ re going to wind up
pulling out tufts of hair over the most stupid mistakes imaginable. Now, while a bald head will
make the women believe you ??™ re a virile stallion, or at least save on lighting bills in the office,
surely you ??™ d rather save on the price of a toupee for the time being and just get the darn code
working.
Every programmer has their own preference of a debugging toolkit for their favorite language.
Most languages even come with a proprietary debugger and output panel set nicely integrated
into the associated IDE. However, with haXe in its infancy, it doesn ??™ t even come with its own IDE.
Yet! Despite this, haXe does still provide quite a substantial array of features oriented to debugging
the frilly bits out of your buggy code.


Pages:
330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354