Hello!

Tell me, please, are there any fundamental differences between the Firebug plugin and the Google Chrome developer tool?

Both are designed for debugging, but what's the difference?

Which application has more advantages or does the principle work for someone like that?

Thank!

Closed due to the fact that it is necessary to reformulate the question so that it was possible to give an objectively correct answer by the participants of Grundy , aleksandr barakin , Visman , Denis , user207618 12 Sep '16 at 8:01 .

The question gives rise to endless debates and discussions based not on knowledge, but on opinions. To get an answer, rephrase your question so that it can be given an unambiguously correct answer, or delete the question altogether. If the question can be reformulated according to the rules set out in the certificate , edit it .

  • the difference is for which browser they apply - Grundy
  • one
    @Grundy, i.e. the difference is only in browsers, and the functionality is the same? - Pavel
  • The first is a plugin, the second is part of the browser, i.e., more freedom. As for the functionality, it’s about the same, now all the developer’s tools are like clones, you probably just don’t need anything else. - user207618
  • There are no permanent fundamental differences. These are two products occupying the same niche: when something appears in one, they immediately try to do it in the other. I personally used firebug once, because I liked its interface more, but once I started to slow down one complex spa with the firebag turned on (some memory leaks in it), I switched to chrome dev tools and got used to it. - Duck Learns to Take Cover

0