Super simple, but solves these pain points:
- Lets you leave log statements in production, client-side code.
- It won't log anything unless
localStorage.debug
is set. - Uses native
console
rather than trying to wrap it in something (which makes the output ugly). - Works with CommonJS.
- It's just a selective alias for the
window.console
so the normal API applies.
Step 1. include it:
<script src="&log.js"></script>
Step 2. Use the console
in your code as usual:
console.log("hello");
Step 3. If you want to see log output set a value called debug
in localStorage
by doing typing this in console:
localStorage.debug = true
Step 4. Refresh the page, you should now see logs.
Step 5. To turn off console, just delete the localStorage flag:
delete localStorage.debug
Step 6. Feel free to deploy to production with console stuff in there.
var logger = require('&log');
logger.log('hello');
This is identical to:
console.log('hello');
You could even get fancy and call it console
. However by doing this you take the risk that you'll forget to require
it and it'll still work and you'll ship it to production. However, obviously this would work as well:
var console = require('&log');
console.log('hello');
MIT