Please post the details. :-)

On Saturday, 24 November 2012 05:14:52 UTC-6, Chris wrote:
>
> Since my original post, I've found a way to use Wing IDE reliably for 
> remote servers.
>
> If anyone has need of this, write back and I will post the details.
>
>
> On Friday, June 8, 2012 11:44:33 AM UTC-4, Chris wrote:
>>
>> Wing is indeed a great tool.  I use it for local-machine debugging all 
>> the time and it has been a godsend.
>>
>> Question -- has anyone had luck setting up Wing for remote debugging of 
>> web2py processes on a different machine?  I have been able to remotely 
>> debug simple Python scripts, but when I put the Wing hook code in web2py 
>> modules, the remote debugger connects to the IDE very briefly then 
>> disconnects.  So far I have tried putting the hooks in web2py.py and in 
>> gluon / widget.py / start().  This seems strange because when running 
>> web2py locally from the IDE, web2py.py is used as the "main debug file".  I 
>> would rather not add the hooks to individual applications (controllers, 
>> models and/or modules).  Can anyone point me in the right direction?
>>
>> Thanks
>>
>>
>>
>> On Thursday, April 23, 2009 1:51:21 AM UTC-4, Speedbird wrote:
>>>
>>> Folks, 
>>>
>>> Just wanted to share with the community a real jewel, many of you knew 
>>> this but I actually started using it "heavily" during the past couple 
>>> of weeks: the IDE is wing from wingware, basically you run web2py from 
>>> inside of it, then just open your controller/module/model from the 
>>> IDE, set up a breakpoint and voila you have a very interesting 
>>> development "studio" ala visual studio. 
>>>
>>> I've added a screenshot of my desktop running the IDE with my current 
>>> pet, pyforum.org being "debugged", the screenshot can be found here: 
>>> http://www.julioflores.com/static/debug_web2py.png 
>>>
>>> Wing IDE is not free, BUT you can get a developer's license (which 
>>> will give you the latest "Pro" release bona-fide). you have no idea 
>>> how much less time I've spent debugging the code with a tool like this 
>>> one, long live web2py 
>>>
>>> PS - Here's the web2py-specific information on their page, whoever 
>>> wrote it must've had a good understanding of the web2py framework (was 
>>> it you massimo??) - http://www.wingware.com/doc/howtos/web2py 
>>>
>>> Best regards to all, 
>>>
>>> Julio 
>>>
>>>

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