Supercharge your React debugging workflow with VS Code and Chrome debugging
In our most recent release of our Chrome debugger for VS Code, we have landed a bunch of improvements to our sourcemapping-engine, which enables us to support live-editing and debugging out of the box with create-react-app.
This enables you as a developer to write and debug your React code without leaving the editor, and most importantly it enables you to have a continuous development workflow, where context switching is minimal, as you don’t have to switch between tools.
You can now write code, set a breakpoints, make a changes to the code, and debug your newly modified code — all from your editor
How to get started in 6 steps
- Download the latest release of VS Code and install our Chrome debugger
- Create your React app using create-react-app
- Use the following config for your
launch.json
file to configure the VS Code debugger and put it inside.vscode
in your root folder.
{ "version": "0.2.0", "configurations": [ { "name": "Chrome", "type": "chrome", "request": "launch", "url": "http://localhost:3000", "webRoot": "${workspaceRoot}/src" } ] }
4. Start your React app by running npm start
in your favorite terminal
5. Start debugging in VS Code by pressing F5
or by clicking the green debug icon
Happy debugging!
Details
Our Chrome debugger now supports Webpack’s Hot Module Replacement mechanism, which pushes module changes to the browser by running a local file watcher.
Our debugger is now able to pickup these changes and re-applies the newly generated HMR sourcemap to the loaded source files on the fly. This enables the live editing and debugging experiences, without adding a need for more file watches or background tools