There's this excellent Q&A at WordPress Stack Exchange, lots of knowledgeable folks explaining their debugging techniques: How do you debug plugins?
In the Javascript arena you basically need <script>console.log('the value is' + variable);</script>
. And use Google Chrome inspector and/or Firebug.
In PHP, it depends on where things are happening or where you want the output.
Official documentation in the Codex.
Example wp-config.php
for Debugging
// Enable WP_DEBUG mode
define( 'WP_DEBUG', true );
// Enable Debug logging to the /wp-content/debug.log file
define( 'WP_DEBUG_LOG', true );
// Disable display of errors and warnings
define( 'WP_DEBUG_DISPLAY', false );
@ini_set( 'display_errors', 0 );
// Use dev versions of core JS and CSS files (only needed if you are modifying these core files)
define( 'SCRIPT_DEBUG', true );
Printing information to a log file
The following uses an OSX/Unix/Linux system path, adjust for Windows.
/* Log to File
* Description: Log into system php error log, usefull for Ajax and stuff that FirePHP doesn't catch
*/
function my_log_file( $msg, $name = '' )
{
// Print the name of the calling function if $name is left empty
$trace=debug_backtrace();
$name = ( '' == $name ) ? $trace[1]['function'] : $name;
$error_dir = '/Applications/MAMP/logs/php_error.log';
$msg = print_r( $msg, true );
$log = $name . " | " . $msg . "
";
error_log( $log, 3, $error_dir );
}
Then, in you code call the function my_log_file( $post, 'The post contents are:' );
Print directly in the rendered Html
/* Echo variable
* Description: Uses <pre> and print_r to display a variable in formated fashion
*/
function echo_log( $what )
{
echo '<pre>'.print_r( $what, true ).'</pre>';
}
And wherever needed use it like: echo_log( $post );
.
This extension will log information directly in the browser console. Refer to the following Q&A at WordPress Answers: How to use WP-FirePHP extension?.
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