How can i access chrome web inspector on iphone?
Chrome on IOS/PC din't see phones targets.
Tools such as Weinre didn't helps to fix current bugs.
Related
I am connecting my iPhone 5 SE with an Apple OEM lighting-to-thunderbolt cable. I have the latest version of macOS (10.15.3) installed.
I have made sure that the Web Inspector setting in Settings > Safari > Advanced is turned on.
On both Safari and Safari Technology Preview I have enabled the Develop menu. My device does not show up in either.
I tried removing trusted devices from my iPhone by resetting my location and privacy in General > Reset. I then re-added my macOS system as a trusted device. This did not help either.
Any thoughts?
I am using OSX 10.15.3, (non-preview) Safari 13.0.5 and an iPhone 7 (A1660) running iOS 13.3. I plugged the phone into the Mac for the first time and trusted the computer. The Web Inspector and Remote Automation settings are available on the phone. Desktop Safari is able to find the phone in its Develop tab. It is possible to debug web pages or progressive web apps saved to the home screen, when one or both of Web Inspect and Remote Automation are enabled on the phone. Even if the debugger is not enabled, desktop Safari still knows the phone is there but shows No Inspectable Applications.
Try setting up WiFi sync for the phone, and connecting it with the cable.
I am using this tool- Safari Technology Preview to debug my iphone on mac.
Download link- https://developer.apple.com/safari/technology-preview/
is there a way how to debug an iOS mobile app on Windows or Linux (Ubuntu)?
I have an application which runs fine on Android, but it has some flaws on iOS. For Android debugging, I always used the Chrome device inspector and I am wondering if it’s possible for iOS too?
The Webkit Adapter I found (https://github.com/RemoteDebug/remotedebug-ios-webkit-adapter) works for debugging websites opened on iPhone via SAFARI browser, but not for the mobile app. Any ideas?
Thanks a lot for any suggestions.
Yes, you can develop your own lldb to support debugging non-jailbroken iOS device on Window, like this
Is there any way to inspect a page in IOS Safari using Chrome Developer Tools??
I'm looking for a solution like Safari Desktop > iOS Safari.
I'm working in a windows machine and I don't have Safari.
Thanks in advance
The only tool I know of that would get close to that is WeInRe, but that's not the full Chrome Developer Tools.
I am using Safari v7.1 and iOS Simulator v7.1 running ios v7.
I have enabled all the options in Mobile Safari in the iOS simulator as well as in Safari browser on Mac (v10.9.5) as per this url: http://webdesign.tutsplus.com/articles/quick-tip-using-web-inspector-to-debug-mobile-safari--webdesign-8787
However when I run any hybrid app in Simulator or open a webpage in mobile Safari, I dont see the webpage in Safari Web inspector. The Mac Safari option "Develop -> iOS Simulator" shows "No Inspectable application" to debug.
The same works fine if I connect an actual iPhone.
Any pointers are welcome!
From a WWDC 2014 session 512 "web_inspector_and_modern_javascript", you have to create a .entitlements file with these keys. It's about at 22:48 min in the video.
Can't find in Apple's Safari Web Inspector Guide though. Just weird... :(
I am developing a web app for iPad and testing it on Safari on Mac and Safari on iPad Simulator. Now there are some issues with CSS in iPad Simulator which work quite well in Safari on Mac.
Now my question is,
Is there a powerful debugging tool for Safari in iPad Simulator?
When running safari in an XCode device simulator, the desktop Safari (v6) Develop menu shows those devices. From there, you can fire up the developer tools (DOM browser etc.) for the mobile browser. This helped me debug an mobile safari css issue without hardware.
Note: As of iOS6 this is not the correct way of doing remote debugging, leaving this answer for historical reasons but you should look into remote inspection with Safari, here is a good article: http://jeffreysambells.com/2012/09/22/ios-safari-web-inspector
Have a look at this, (a bash script I wrote) https://gist.github.com/2241976. It will allow you to open the iPad simulator and run Webkit's remote inspector, which will look just like this.
iWebInspector is quite a powerful tool for the iOs simulator's Safari.
It uses the same inspector as Chrome and it works nicely (I've used it myself and found it really helpful).
From their website
iWebInspector is a free tool to debug, profile and inspect web
applications running on iOS Simulator (iPhone or iPad). You can check
resources, see and change HTML & CSS, use breakpoints on JavaScript
code, create charts and more just as if you were on Safari for
Desktop, Chrome or Firebug.
It works for any web in Safari -the web browser-, for a chrome-less
webapp (full-screen) and also for apps using UIWebView -including
PhoneGap applications-.