> Yeah, that's what I generally do as well.

Ditto.

> On Jan 16, 2020, at 1:27 AM, Greg Dove <greg.d...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Yeah, that's what I generally do as well.
> 
> Not sure if you are working across swf and js at the same time... if I am
> comparing swf stuff with js, I like to have both in the js console, in
> which case I do something like this:
> https://github.com/apache/royale-asjs/blob/develop/examples/crux/CruxQuickStart/src/main/royale/tracer.as
> 
> 
> 
> 
> On Thu, Jan 16, 2020 at 12:23 PM Josh Tynjala <joshtynj...@bowlerhat.dev>
> wrote:
> 
>> As a temporary workaround, I was able to use console.log() instead.
>> 
>> --
>> Josh Tynjala
>> Bowler Hat LLC <https://bowlerhat.dev>
>> 
>> 
>> On Wed, Jan 15, 2020 at 2:52 PM Josh Tynjala <joshtynj...@bowlerhat.dev>
>> wrote:
>> 
>>> I see that Language.trace() has a @royaledebug doc tag, which seems to
>>> remove it from a release build. I just spent half an hour trying to
>> figure
>>> out why some event listeners weren't being called. Turns out that they
>>> were, in fact, being called. Instead, the compiler was silently removing
>>> some of my code. Is there a way to turn that off and keep trace() in a
>>> release build?
>>> 
>>> --
>>> Josh Tynjala
>>> Bowler Hat LLC <https://bowlerhat.dev>
>>> 
>> 

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