Chapter 10. Using the Debugger
In This Chapter
Seeing the kinds of errors that may come up
Using Xcode's Debugger
Zeroing in on the kinds of errors the Debugger can help you find
Stamping out logic errors with the Debugger
Let's face it: When you're developing an application, sometimes things don't work out quite the way you planned — especially when you knock over a can of Jolt Cola on the keyboard and fry it out of existence.
"Stuff happens," in the immortal words of a famous ex-U.S. Secretary of Defense. When it comes to developing your own programs, that "stuff" comes in three categories:
Syntax errors: Compilers — the Objective-C compiler in Xcode is a case in point — expect you to use a certain set of instructions in your code; those instructions make up the language it understands. When you type
If
instead ofif
, or the subtler[view release}
instead of[view release]
, the compiler suddenly has no idea what you're talking about and generates a syntax error.Syntax errors are the most obvious of errors out there, simply because your program won't compile (be able to run) until all of these are fixed. Generally, syntax errors spring from typographical errors like those mentioned here. (And yes, the errors can be pretty penny-ante stuff — an I for an i, for goodness sake — but it doesn't take much to stump a compiler.)
In Figure 10-1, you can see an example of a syntax error. This one was kindly pointed out to me by Xcode's friendly little Debugger feature (more on him later). I'd forgotten ...
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