Once FirePHP is installed, when you next open your Firebug panel, you’ll now see an additional blue bug. This requires that you already have Firebug installed. To start, you first need to install the FirePHP extension from Mozilla’s Firefox Add-ons site. ![]() Once you’re set up, you can log warnings and errors in your PHP scripts to the Firebug console, just as if you were developing JavaScript. But did you know it can also be used to debug PHP? Yes, thanks to an additional Firefox extension called FirePHP.īy combining this extension, which sits on top of Firebug, with a server-side library, your PHP scripts will be able to send debugging information to the browser, handily encoded in the HTTP response headers. The little ’bug is a fantastically useful HTML/CSS/JavaScript/Ajax debugger. ![]() If you’re anything like me, you’d sooner forgo water than Firebug when working on a web project.
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