TL;DR: see UPDATE#3
I recently answered a Stack Overflow question and inserted a stack snippet for a quick demo of my solution.
However, it was a simple JavaScript-only related problem and I didn't use any other panels (HTML/CSS) and the result was the classic console.log(result)
.
I was wondering if there should be some kind of API to present the console output in the snippet results panel (where only HTML is viewable now).
Let's say you have a solution for a sum
function and you write it in a stack snippet like this one:
function sum(a, b) {
return a + b;
}
console.log('1 + 2 = ' + sum(1, 2));
The code is working, but the snippet isn't useful at all because the result is not shown on the result panel (it acts like a static code block).
Sure one could've written the snippet as this:
function sum(a, b) {
return a + b;
}
showResult('1 + 2 = ' + sum(1, 2));
// helper function
function showResult(result) {
document.querySelector('#result').innerHTML = result;
}
<div id="result"></div>
But I think that it defeats the purpose of the snippet: to make it easier for the users to insert and see the results of the solution.
So what do you think? Should I just open my console in order to see all the complete stack snippet outputs or is there a need of some kind of console API for the stack snippets too?
Update:
After several months after I recently added this question, while I really wanted to see the the reaction of SO's community on this topic, it became clear that there isn't going to be a fast decision taken by the SO team.
Therefore, in my opinion, currently, the best solution is the one described in Sam's answer. With this approach you are able to show both dom and console outputs in separate panels without having to alter your code to implement this kind of separation. Of course there is the downside of that you have to include and rely on a 3rd party tool (such as firebug lite), but it seems to be a minor cost if you consider the result.
To explain my decision, I would have been OK with having the user to just check the browser's native console if he had the opportunity to only open the console for the targeted stack snippet. But since you can't and opening the console can show multiple different things that do not have anything to do with the stack snippets (it can show logs, errors or any other kind of messages from the parent window and from other sibling frames), I consider that this approach would actually make the user more confused about the result of the code.
I will keep my eyes opened and will post updates and possibly accept different answers as time passes and new ideas/tools emerge on this topic, but for now, having firebug lite or any similar tool is the way to go.
Update #2:
It seems that a snippets competitor (if I can name it like this in this context) has recently implemented this feature: https://blog.codepen.io/2016/01/27/new-feature-javascript-console/ .
If codepen, which is a massive player in this field, decided to have a custom console for the same reasons, it kind of validates my original needs for the console in stack snippets.
Update #3:
It seems that SO implemented a virtual console feature in the code snippets that actually let the user see a simple console.log
output in the result pane.
In this crosspost on meta.stackexchange.com you can see the answer regarding this exact feature: https://meta.stackexchange.com/a/279419/163555 .
alert()
in stack snippets. It ain't pretty, but it works. It would be nice if SO would (optionally?) catch the console output and display that in the snippet, though.alert
is just a workaround right now.var log = (function () { var $log = $('#log'); return function (msg) { $('<p/>', {text: msg}).prependTo($log) } })();
console.log
output can be viewed through the browsers dev tools if the OP is new to web development?getElementById
because ID, and because it's WAY faster thanquerySelector
. :Dconsole.log
to the result pane confuse the OP further? If you really want to outputconsole.log
as DOM content then use @jeroen's method -console.log = function(x) { document.write(x + "<br />"); };
or justdocument.write
even (less confusing in terms of what to expect in each case).console.log
instead of just replacing it. The native functions are getting more featureful over time (custom formatters coming soon!) and we wouldn't want to break examples of those.console: true
flag which you can choose to be false. Old snippets don't have that flag set and so don't show the output (probably best since the output might have obstructed whatever the old snippet was trying to show).