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Allinea DDT - a graphical debugger supporting for parallel/multi-process and multithreaded applications, for C/C++ and F90. DDD is the standard front-end from the GNU Project. It is a complex tool that works with most common debuggers (GDB, jdb, Python debugger, Perl debugger, Tcl, and others) natively or with some external programs (for PHP).
Playground Access PHP Ruby/Rails Python/Django SQL Other DB Fiddle [am]: Free & Paid No No No Yes MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQLite dbfiddle [an]: Free No No No Yes Db2, Firebird, MariaDB, MySQL, Node.js, Oracle, Postgres, SQL Server, SQLite, YugabyteDB
Since 7 October 2024, Python 3.13 is the latest stable release, and it and, for few more months, 3.12 are the only releases with active support including for bug fixes (as opposed to just for security) and Python 3.9, [55] is the oldest supported version of Python (albeit in the 'security support' phase), due to Python 3.8 reaching end-of-life.
Pygame version 2 was planned as "Pygame Reloaded" in 2009, but development and maintenance of Pygame completely stopped until the end of 2016 with version 1.9.1. After the release of version 1.9.5 in March 2019, development of a new version 2 was active on the roadmap. [11] Pygame 2.0 released on 28 October, 2020, Pygame's 20th anniversary. [12]
Data Display Debugger (GNU DDD) is a graphical user interface (using the Motif toolkit) for command-line debuggers such as GDB, [2] DBX, JDB, HP Wildebeest Debugger, [note 1] XDB, the Perl debugger, the Bash debugger, the Python debugger, and the GNU Make debugger. [4]
GDB is still actively being developed. As of version 7.0 new features include support for Python scripting [8] and as of version 7.8 GNU Guile scripting as well. [9] Since version 7.0, support for "reversible debugging" — allowing a debugging session to step backward, much like rewinding a crashed program to see what happened — is available ...
Winpdb debugging itself. A debugger is a computer program used to test and debug other programs (the "target" programs). Common features of debuggers include the ability to run or halt the target program using breakpoints, step through code line by line, and display or modify the contents of memory, CPU registers, and stack frames.
Python 2.6 was released to coincide with Python 3.0, and included some features from that release, as well as a "warnings" mode that highlighted the use of features that were removed in Python 3.0. [28] [10] Similarly, Python 2.7 coincided with and included features from Python 3.1, [29] which was released on June 26