diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/quick_tutorial/debugtoolbar.rst')
| -rw-r--r-- | docs/quick_tutorial/debugtoolbar.rst | 32 |
1 files changed, 16 insertions, 16 deletions
diff --git a/docs/quick_tutorial/debugtoolbar.rst b/docs/quick_tutorial/debugtoolbar.rst index d138eb760..f11abc493 100644 --- a/docs/quick_tutorial/debugtoolbar.rst +++ b/docs/quick_tutorial/debugtoolbar.rst @@ -74,11 +74,11 @@ You'll now see an attractive button on the right side of your browser, which you may click to provide introspective access to debugging information in a new browser tab. Even better, if your web application generates an error, you will see a nice traceback on the screen. When you want to disable this -toolbar, no need to change code: you can remove it from ``pyramid.includes`` -in the relevant ``.ini`` configuration file (thus showing why configuration -files are handy.) +toolbar, there's no need to change code: you can remove it from +``pyramid.includes`` in the relevant ``.ini`` configuration file (thus showing +why configuration files are handy.) -Note that the toolbar injects a small amount of html/css into your app just +Note that the toolbar injects a small amount of HTML/CSS into your app just before the closing ``</body>`` tag in order to display itself. If you start to experience otherwise inexplicable client-side weirdness, you can shut it off by commenting out the ``pyramid_debugtoolbar`` line in ``pyramid.includes`` @@ -89,24 +89,24 @@ temporarily. Extra Credit ============ -# Why don't we add ``pyramid_debugtoolbar`` to the list of - ``install_requires`` dependencies in ``debugtoolbar/setup.py``? +#. Why don't we add ``pyramid_debugtoolbar`` to the list of + ``install_requires`` dependencies in ``debugtoolbar/setup.py``? -# Introduce a bug into your application: Change: +#. Introduce a bug into your application: Change: - .. code-block:: python + .. code-block:: python - def hello_world(request): - return Response('<body><h1>Hello World!</h1></body>') + def hello_world(request): + return Response('<body><h1>Hello World!</h1></body>') - to: + to: - .. code-block:: python + .. code-block:: python def hello_world(request): return xResponse('<body><h1>Hello World!</h1></body>') - Save, and visit http://localhost:6543/ again. Notice the nice - traceback display. On the lowest line, click the "screen" icon to the - right, and try typing the variable names ``request`` and ``Response``. - What else can you discover? + Save, and visit http://localhost:6543/ again. Notice the nice + traceback display. On the lowest line, click the "screen" icon to the + right, and try typing the variable names ``request`` and ``Response``. + What else can you discover? |
