15 Helpful In-Browser Web Development Tools
There are many useful Web development tools that integrate in your browser. These in-browser tools are commonly known as add-ons or extensions. Though add-ons and extensions aren’t just for Web development, many of them out there are designed specifically for Web developers. In-browser tools vary greatly in the jobs they perform; for example, some of them help you diagnose issues with CSS, HTML and JavaScript, while others evaluate the accessibility of your website.
In this article, we explore some of the most popular and useful in-browser Web development tools. You’ll find tools for popular Web browsers like Firefox and Internet Explorer. Whether you need to debug and inspect your HTML, inspect HTTP headers, access FTP source files, evaluate accessibility or just figure out what color a Web page element is, you may find a variety of tools discussed here useful.
Firebug
Firebug is an extension for the Mozilla Firefox browser that allows you to debug and inspect HTML, CSS, the Document Object Model (DOM) and JavaScript. Though it has many strong features, it’s most known for revolutionizing the way developers debug and profile JavaScript code.
For example, before Firebug, many developers would use the alert() function to see what a variable contains or to find what line the code breaks. With Firebug enabled, you’re told specifically what the error is and which line it comes from. Firebug is an excellent tool for AJAX application developers because it lets you explore and perform on-the-fly edits on the DOM to see what happens when you manipulate Web page elements after a user action.
Aside from its popular JavaScript and DOM functionalities, Firebug can also log network activity to allow you to see detailed results of HTTP connections, inspect and edit HTML on the fly and debug and visualize your CSS.
Further Reading
- Debug and tune applications on the fly with Firebug
- An In-Depth Look At The Future of JavaScript Debugging With Firebug
- Build Better Pages with Firebug
Web Developer
The Web Developer extension (for the Firefox, Flock and SeaMonkey Web browsers) is an add-on that adds a tool bar with a menu of options for debugging and inspecting Web pages. It has a ton of features, my favorite being the View CSS Information option (CSS >> View Style Information, or Control + Shift + Y on Windows) which makes a page element clickable and shows you CSS selectors that affect that particular page element. It’s helpful for exploring and understanding large CSS files and projects that you’re unfamiliar with (such as a new open-source content management system).
It has built-in options for syntax validation for popular Web services, such as W3C’s CSS Validator and HiSoftware’s Web Content Accessibility Report, for your convenience. It has many other useful features, such as disable options for CSS, JavaScript and images, to test for degradation and progressive enhancement; a Forms menu with options for working with Web forms; Display Div Order and Display Block Size options to help you visualize the layout; and so much more.
YSlow
YSlow is a Firefox extension created by Yahoo! developers that integrates with Firebug (therefore you need to have Firebug enabled for it to work). YSlow analyzes a Web page for front-end performance and, in its simplest usage, gives you a letter grade (A being the best and F being the poorest) for each of the best practices for speeding up your website.
YSlow also allows you to inspect in detail things that are essential for a high-performance website. For example, the Stats view gives you the total size of a Web page and a summary of items that are loaded when the Web page is requested (i.e. style sheets, JavaScript files, Flash objects and images), so that you can hunt down the bottlenecks that cause a Web page to load slowly.
The Components view outlines every single component of a Web page in tabular format and allows you to inspect it to see attributes such as size, expiration date (for cached files), whether it uses server-side compression (Gzip) and response time (how long the component took to load).
Further Reading
- What the 80/20 Rule Tells Us about Reducing HTTP Requests
- Maximizing Parallel Downloads in the Carpool Lane
- AJAX performance analysis
- Yahoo’s Problems Are Not Your Problems: counter-arguments for some of the rules developed by Yahoo!, such as penalizing you for not having a Content Delivery Network.
Internet Explorer Web Developer Toolbar
If you need similar functionality to that of Firebug and Web Developer for Firefox, but want to debug, inspect and tune your Web pages and applications on the Internet Explorer browser, check out the Internet Explorer Web Developer Toolbar. The IE Web Developer Toolbar, when enabled, opens a toggle-able pane located at the bottom of the Web browser, giving you access to many helpful options for exploring Web page components.
For example, you can experiment to see how page elements work by editing the Web page’s DOM and HTML directly in the browser, allowing you to quickly change and edit DOM elements to see what happens when you perform certain actions or modify certain parts of the code. You can also debug, test and inspect JavaScript with the IE Web Developer Toolbar, giving you options for setting breakpoints, seeing the call stack and exploring variable attributes.
It has a ton of other helpful features, such as selectively disabling IE settings (to see how your Web pages degrade in IE); the ability to view the HTML and CSS source of any Web page with syntax-highlighting; and an in-browser ruler to help you measure things on a Web page.
Further Reading
Fiddler Web Debugger
Fiddler is an Internet Explorer extension that analyzes and profiles a Web page’s HTTP traffic. If you’ve ever wanted to know exactly what happens when a client requests a Web page, Fiddler is the tool that’ll help you do the job. The HTTP Statistics view exposes all components and files required to generate a particular page, giving you details such as the total number of HTTP requests, total page weight, HTTP response headers and cache expiration.
Fiddler permits you to set up breakpoints, allowing you to step through and edit HTTP traffic (to see how it would affect your Web page), a useful feature for analyzing AJAX-based interaction and potential security flaws in a Web application. Perhaps what makes Fiddler so powerful is its extensibility, allowing you to create your own scripts (or import other developers’ scripts) to perform certain tasks or make interface modifications to the extension itself.
Further Reading
- Fiddler PowerToy – Part 1: HTTP Debugging
- The Fiddler User Interface
- Fiddler Demonstration Videos
- Using Fiddler with non-Internet Explorer Browsers
DebugBar
DebugBar is a debugging in-browser extension for the Internet Explorer browser. It has many helpful features, such as the ability to send a Web page screenshot via email, a color picker, the ability to view both the original and interpreted code (i.e. if you use JavaScript to manipulate the styles of a DOM object, then you can see the interpreted HTML source code of that manipulation) and a Console API (after installing Companion.JS) to help you gain information through a command-line interface about particular components of a Web page.
DebugBar is free for personal and educational use, but you are required to buy a license if you use it for commercial purposes.
HttpWatch
HttpWatch is another HTTP traffic viewer and debugger for Firefox and Internet Explorer that is similar to Fiddler. It has many unique features and a more intuitive, less intimidating interface than Fiddler. Some notable features are the ability to generate request-level time charts (useful for documentation and presentation purposes); decryption of HTTPS traffic to help you debug, inspect and tweak your secure SSL-based connections; and the ability to export captured data to XML and CSV formats for importing into spreadsheet applications such as Microsoft Excel or Google Spreadsheets.
HTTPWatch has a Basic edition, which is free, and a Professional edition, which has more options. Check out the comparison table between the two editions to see the exact differences.
Live HTTP Headers
Live HTTP Headers is a Firefox extension that allows you to inspect HTTP request and response headers. Exploring HTTP headers allows you to debug Web applications, glean some information about the website’s server and inspect cookies sent to the client requesting the page.
For example, the Server response header gives you a website’s HTTP server type (Apache, IIS, nginx, etc.), the HTTP server version and the operating system (though server administrators can remove or limit the information you see for security purposes).
Web Accessibility Toolbar
The Web Accessibility Toolbar is a freeware extension for Internet Explorer and Opera that gives you a slew of options for quickly evaluating and analyzing your Web content’s accessibility. It has validation options for submitting your URL to content accessibility web services such as Juicy Studio tools, a grayscale converter to simulate the user experience of individuals with color-blindness and poor eyesight, and a search function for particular page structures (e.g. finding list objects and unordered lists).
Other useful tools released by Vision Australia are the Colour Contrast Analyser, which analyzes the contrast of foreground and background colors for readability, and the Complex Table Mark-Up (or Com Tab) Toolbar, which can help you understand (and construct) complex tables that are usable by non-traditional Web browsers (such as screen readers).
Further Reading
- WebAIM: Using the AIS Web Accessibility Toolbar
- The Web Accessibility Toolbar and the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines
Fangs
Fangs is an in-browser tool for Firefox that emulates what a screen reader “sees” when visiting a Web page. Its function is simple: to output a transcript of what a screen reader will read out to a user when a Web page is visited. It’s a helpful tool for quickly analyzing if you’ve structured your content effectively so that it’s understandable and usable by vision-impaired individuals, without forcing you to learn to use (and purchase) a screen-reader application such as JAWS or Windows Eyes.
Further Reading
Venkman JavaScript Debugger
Venkman is the codename for Mozilla’s very own JavaScript debugging environment. It is available as an add-on that can be used to extend browsers such as Firefox, Netscape, and SeaMonkey. It is a robust environment for doing complex JavaScript debugging and troubleshooting. The Console view gives you a command-line interface for interacting with the debugger. It has an excellent Stack view feature that allows you to step through active functions when it reaches breakpoints.
Further Reading
- Venkman Walkthrough
- Debugging JavaScript Using Venkman, Part 1
- Venkman 0.9.x Frequently Asked Questions
ColorZilla
ColorZilla is an incredibly simple — but very useful — extension for Firefox. If you’ve ever wanted to determine what colors are used on a Web page, ColorZilla is the tool for the job. It adds an eyedropper icon to the bottom-left corner of Firefox.
Clicking on the eyedropper icon makes objects on the Web page clickable, and upon clicking a particular section of a Web page, it outputs the hexadecimal, RGB and hue/saturation values of that area . Before ColorZilla, you might have pasted a screen capture of a Web page into a graphics editor like Photoshop and then used the eyedropper tool in the editor to sample colors. ColorZilla saves you time and streamlines color-sampling processes.
FireShot
FireShot is an in-browser tool for Firefox and Internet Explorer that allows you to take screenshots and then annotate, edit, organize and export them. Screen-grabbing is a common activity for Web developers to document previews of Web application prototypes and share them with clients, and FireShot gives you a feature-packed in-browser option to manage and streamline your screenshot needs.
Web Inspector
Web Inspector is part of the Webkit open-source browser engine project. It’s an ultra-sleek tool for inspecting the DOM hierarchy in a separate, compact HUD-style window. You can easily search the DOM, explore the DOM tree (hierarchy) and have a useful interface for isolating DOM sub-trees and nodes so that you can focus on particular sections of a Web page. The Web Inspector also provides you with a Style pane to explore CSS rules applied to particular page elements.
FireFTP
FireFTP is a free, cross-platform Firefox extension for FTP’ing files. It offers several advantages to stand-alone FTP applications, such as its operating system-independent requirements. What’s exceptional about FireFTP is that even though it is an in-browser (and free!) application, it has all the features you would expect from a standalone FTP application, such as support for secure (SSL, TLS, SFTP) protocols, a synchronization feature to sync up local and remote files, and directory comparison to help you see what files are missing or different between two directories and much more.
What’s your favorite in-browser tool?
There is an overwhelming amount of in-browser tools for Web development out there. Some are specific to particular Web technologies and set-ups (such as FirePHP for PHP developers, SQLite Manager for developers using SQLite databases, and Opera Dragonfly for developers who prefer using the Opera browser). If your favorite tool isn’t on the list, let us know in the comments section why it’s your favorite and why we should check it out.
(al)

















Daniel
November 18th, 2008 2:14 pmVery useful tools.
I always use FireBug and Web Developer.
Eddy Munn
November 18th, 2008 2:18 pmFireBug has helped me on many projects to crease out the bugs!
Chris
November 18th, 2008 2:22 pmThe Safari (WebKit) Web Inspector is much different than the link in the article provides. A more recent overview can be seen at Yet another one more thing… a new Web Inspector!
It keeps getting better and is beginning to approach Firebug usability. The most recent build has the Inspect Element contextual menu item missing which reduces it’s convenience greatly. You can still invoke it from the menus when you enable the debug menu. I hope it returns soon.
Marc
November 18th, 2008 2:25 pmSafari’s Web Inspector has been redesigned, the mentioned feature set and screenshot taken are way too old. Take a look at this blog post by Dave Hyatt: Web Inspector Redesign.
Paddy
November 18th, 2008 2:28 pmGreat list!
I have to look at a lot of websites in other languages so I use the Translator add-on for Firefox. Really handy to translate the whole page in one click.
Jase
November 26th, 2009 12:13 amGreat option!
I didn’t know it existed, but I will use it now. Thanks!
Jase
November 26th, 2009 12:15 amGreat option!
I didn’t know it existed, but I will use it now. Thanks!
I think everyone agrees that Firebug is a great time saver. I also like SenSEO, to see how my site works in search engines.
Neko
November 18th, 2008 2:29 pmFireBug has saved my life countless times…..it has even saved my marriage.
Who-da-thunk-it!
Matthew
November 18th, 2008 2:29 pmI use Charles (http://www.charlesproxy.com/) over fiddler, its a lot better!
neimado
November 18th, 2008 2:29 pmFiddler is not an IE extension, it is a stand-alone application.
Michael
November 18th, 2008 2:30 pmFIREBUG! I love you.
backseatsurfer
November 18th, 2008 2:39 pmI cant exist without Firebug!
Ivan Nikolic
November 18th, 2008 2:45 pmNice reviews, although I still use Photoshop for grabbing color codes, part of my habit :)
Ricardo
November 18th, 2008 2:59 pmAnother one who can’t live without Firebug. I’ll give a try on the other ones.
Jesper
November 18th, 2008 3:00 pmCheck out Aardvark for Firefox :-)
k7
November 18th, 2008 3:03 pmGreat post, as usual!
Did not notice the RSS icon… awesome!
Michael
November 18th, 2008 3:03 pmwebdeveloper toolbar for color info
mikemike
November 18th, 2008 3:09 pmForget FireBug. It’s really only great for JS debugging or hacking sites that use hidden inputs or JS to validate forms.
Web Developer is the best FF addon ever created. All I’ll say is hot keys. Check them out.
Darren
November 18th, 2008 3:11 pmFireBug is the best tool out there! It has saved me who knows how many times!
kocsmy
November 18th, 2008 3:17 pmmeasureIT is quite usefull tool too.
Nate
November 18th, 2008 4:08 pmWow… pretty shweet!
aditia
November 18th, 2008 4:13 pmtoo bad fireshot not avaliable for linux, i’m using abduction to take screenshot
use aardvark to view site layout
Shaun
November 18th, 2008 4:39 pmAnother great tool is HTML Validator / HTML Tidy which is available for FireFox.
I find it must more convenient than the validator built in to Web Developer.
Steve Robillard
November 18th, 2008 4:53 pmWhile not my favorite one tool I think deserves to be on this list is pencil.
John Faulds
November 18th, 2008 5:05 pmFirebug is definitely my favourite. It might’ve also been worth mentioning that Opera now has Dragonfly which offers similar functionality to Firebug and Webkit’s Inspector.
Brian B
November 18th, 2008 5:29 pmFireFox – WASP
Mr Javo
November 18th, 2008 5:42 pmWeb Developers, FireBug/FirePHP and Colorzilla are my favorites, but I’m going to install a couple of this great list. Thanks for sharing!
Jonathan V
November 18th, 2008 5:47 pmAm allready using FireFTP , FireBug and the Web Developer toolbar and I have to agree they are awesome to say the least ^^
Marc Morgan
November 18th, 2008 6:38 pmI like Westciv’s bookmarklets XRAY and MRI. You don’t have to install anything. Just have an Internet connection.
jhOy
November 18th, 2008 6:53 pmi really love firebug! since i’ve known it, i never let it go :)
AJ
November 18th, 2008 6:56 pmAnother useful accessibility plugin is the WAVE Toolbar, which provides similar functionality to WAVE’s online web accessibility checking service, but can be used on your own machine.
http://wave.webaim.org/toolbar
Jagat
November 18th, 2008 7:01 pmGreat post.
I am already using Fire bug, Web developer, fire shot & Internet Explorer Web Developer Toolbar. Thanks for providing information about other Internet explorer related development tools.
I just installed Debug Bar for IE. Its good 1.
AnggaRifandi
November 18th, 2008 7:03 pmreally nice list :D
Luis
November 18th, 2008 7:09 pmOpera DragonFly, it’s alpha software, but it deserves a mention.
Nick
November 18th, 2008 7:18 pm+1 for measureIt. Very useful when getting your layout right.
Stahn
November 18th, 2008 7:25 pmWhere’s DragonFly?
sahil
November 18th, 2008 7:28 pmfirebug, web developer and fireftp…ive always used them…now im gonna fangs…will help me restructuring my site…thanks
Allan Wind
November 18th, 2008 7:45 pmHackBar is a great way to manipulate complicated URLs interactively. Modify Headers, while imperfect, has been handy to access name based virtual servers, but you do not have the required DNS records in place to access the server by name.
Norm
November 18th, 2008 8:06 pmA fantastic image optimizer is smush.it! (http://www.smushit.com/) which is developed by developers at Yahoo. It does as advertized and goes beyond images optimized in Photoshop. To run this tool, you will need to install Firebug first (as smush.it! is a firebug extension).
The amount of memory shaved off of images varies, but for those who want to squeeze the most out of an image file size, the savings can add up. Sites with heavy traffic can benefit from having images site-wide reduced in file size without any image quality compromises.
Norm
November 18th, 2008 8:14 pmMy mistake… smush.it! is not a firebug extension. It is simply a Firefox add-on.
Christian
November 18th, 2008 8:21 pmI’d easily marry Firebug! FireFTP is also an awesome addon.
Christian
Viggie
November 18th, 2008 8:39 pmInteresting to know that extensions were available for IE now. I use Web developer, FireFTP, ColorZilla & ScreenGrab for Firefox on Linux.
Fireshot is good but is available for Windows only.
Joe Payton
November 18th, 2008 9:34 pmI also use firebug/YSlow, webdeveloper, colorzilla, & measureIT. But there is also Screengrab!. It allows you to copy selections, viewport, or full pages and paste into photoshop. no saving to the desktop and dragging to PS. I hate creativity droppings on my desktop.
Playhead
November 18th, 2008 10:48 pmFirebug is Best
Tobi
November 18th, 2008 11:14 pmi love firebug! without this little plugin i would often get MAD!
web developer bar is the perfect combination for firebug!
Viv Singh
November 18th, 2008 11:15 pmPlugins like fireFTP are really good, I hate installing standalone programs for every tit bit.
Firefox is a real swiss army knife.
Marina
November 19th, 2008 12:05 amHi!!
I love firebug and webdevoloper, I think I can’t live without those plugins
Yummy
November 19th, 2008 12:10 amvery useful! thank you
Grackie
November 19th, 2008 12:17 amhorray Webdeveloper! firefox has more addons than IE
speedcu
November 19th, 2008 12:23 amvery useful article – thx a lot!
I always use firebug, it is very useful and handy :)
Ivan
November 19th, 2008 12:46 amColorzilla, can’t live without it :-)
Second best would be Measure-it! :-)
Константин
November 19th, 2008 12:50 am«tails export» for microformats
Dele
November 19th, 2008 12:51 amAwesome list. Thanks guys :)
paolo
November 19th, 2008 12:57 amScrapbook is also an amazing extension to capture html pages (better than “save a”s)
Adam Elleston
November 19th, 2008 1:00 amFirebug is without a doubt the most used developer tool that I have installed. I would sacrifice my text editor of choice (with syntax highlighting and tabs etc) for notepad just to use Firebug. Web developer is then second for me as its provides a large range of options. Also Show IP is useful for me as it allows me quickly see what server I am working on when on a development or staging server.
Gordon
November 19th, 2008 1:04 amDummy Lipsum is a very handy little Firefox extension. It does just one thing, but the one thing it does is extremely handy if you’re developing an application with a lot of forms. It simply allows you to right click on a text accepting element (a textarea, line input control, etc) and populate it with Lorem Ipsum text. When you’re testing a web app and need to repeatedly fill in the same form over and over again I can’t tell you just how much time this little plugin saves!
Jhay
November 19th, 2008 1:08 amCool nice! I use Firebug and Web Developer also. :)
JHAY
mostafa
November 19th, 2008 1:09 ammy favorite tools in G Chrome browser , reaaaally cool things only for debugging but not a good browser.
handy
November 19th, 2008 1:15 amI like the fire bug!
Tyler Tate
November 19th, 2008 1:41 amDon’t forget about the XRAY Bookmarklet… it’s fairly limited, but a good option for debugging IE6.
Tyler
V1
November 19th, 2008 2:13 amErm, the url you posted to webkit is from 2006… Its 2008 now. thats a 2 years old article…
I suggest you link to this post instead: http://webkit.org/blog/197/web-inspector-redesign/
Zorgatos
November 19th, 2008 2:19 amYou forgot Dust-Me Selectors, IE Tab and Mozilla Accessibility Extension. But my favourite has to be Firebug. I can’t even remember what it was like before Firebug.
zeroone
November 19th, 2008 2:21 amDefinitely Firebug.
Stephen Blake
November 19th, 2008 2:29 amI also use HTML tidy, which has a plugin for Firefox. It provides you with a simple view of validation errors and also gives a more detailed view of the exact problem on each line. There are other tools that do the same things, but I just find it really useful: http://users.skynet.be/mgueury/mozilla/
Stephan
November 19th, 2008 2:29 amTamper Data is a little bit more powerful than Live HTTP Headers.
Az
November 19th, 2008 2:31 amIs there anything out there where you can edit the CSS of a website in IE7 and IE6? Just like you can with the web developer extension in Firefox??
BlabberStar.com
November 19th, 2008 2:33 amI would definitely say FIREBUG!
I am sure it has saved me 500h+ of developing time!
jeroen
November 19th, 2008 2:45 amvery handy for every webdeveloper: the w3c validator plugin for firefox!
Robin
November 19th, 2008 3:02 amFirebug, FireFTP are essential to how I work. I used to use Web Developer Toolbar a lot, but that’s changed since Firefox 3 went and broke the keyboard shortcuts :-(
anamii
November 19th, 2008 3:06 amAnother mention should go to ScreenGrab. I frankly cannot live without it. Invaluable for sending whole page screen shots of a site that is being designed/developed.
Not a truly web developer based plugin – I found using Pencil to be very useful for mocking up forms and dialogs. At the very least you don’t need any image manipulation apps – just Firefox.
tom hermans
November 19th, 2008 3:07 amFireFTP, ColorZilla, MeasureIt, Firebug, Webdeveloper extension
I code websites just using Firefox and Notepad++, all freeware and a lot handier than all those heavy, expensive wysiwyg web-editors
Martin Majling
November 19th, 2008 3:38 amFireBug and Web Developer and screengrab (good for making fast screenshot) and iMacro
Daan
November 19th, 2008 3:41 amI use Web Developer :D
Great list by the way ;)
Oliver
November 19th, 2008 3:44 amI like httpfox. It is similiar to httpwatch but it is a free addon for FireFox.
EOL
November 19th, 2008 3:47 amXray is indispensable:
http://www.westciv.com/xray/
It’s a bookmarklet that, when activated, describes any element you click on. Awesome!
MK
November 19th, 2008 3:58 amWeb developer, any day
Gusat Silviu
November 19th, 2008 4:03 amMy favorite is firebux :X
J
November 19th, 2008 4:17 amMan, seriously, enable the function to make small posts in RSS
Sam Dwyer
November 19th, 2008 4:17 amGood list, the few firefox addons that I’d add that weren’t included in the list are:
Selenium
Pencil
HTML Tidy
Obtrusive javascript checker
Measureit
Boss
November 19th, 2008 4:21 amInstalled FireShot and ColorZilla after reading this article, thanks!!!
Aravinda
November 19th, 2008 4:26 amNice article,
Tamper Data for Firefox and TamperIE for Internet Explorer.
sweetL
November 19th, 2008 4:32 amBeen well into firebug for a while… recently got into using FirePHP. Its awesome for php developers, especially php developers wanting to debug their ajax (or ajajson) applications.
Matt
November 19th, 2008 4:39 amThree words: “Colour Contrast Analyser”
Not sure if this has been mentioned yet but, if everyone used this when choosing their colour schemes the web would be a better place.
The tool allows me to check and compare foreground and background colour contrast inline with checkpoint 1.1 of the WCAG v1.0.
If someone was to integrate this into a nice, easy to use, Firefox Add-on it would be awesome!
adee
November 19th, 2008 4:39 amYou can easily add pixel perfect to firebug :
“Pixel Perfect is a firefox firebug extension that allows web developers to easily overlay a web composition over top of the developed html. Switching the composition on and off allows the developer to see how many pixels they are off while in development.”
Mark Nutter
November 19th, 2008 4:48 amThese are great, I thought I knew about all the good ones but apparently not. Like debug mode in Safari/Webkit, there’s also a lot of other great tools that come on every Mac that I take advantage of. I didn’t know Webkit had a debug mode that was different than Safari, I’ll be checking that out this morning.
Julien
November 19th, 2008 5:10 amNice list, thanks for sharing.
I would add URLParams
Igor Jovic
November 19th, 2008 5:35 amThank you very much for this!
Justin
November 19th, 2008 6:11 amFirebug allows me to edit the CSS and HTLM and see the changes instantly.
Can Web developer do that? I have not seen the ability to edit the CSS directly in browser with Web Developer or IE Developer.
IF anyone knows how please tell me. Thanks!
kevin
November 19th, 2008 6:13 amI use Firebug, web developer toolbar, fiddler, liveHttp headers, fireFTP. I would try to use other tools mentioned in here as well.
Timothy
November 19th, 2008 6:29 amIf you are familiar with Firebug and love its features then the IE Developer Toolbar is a big let-down. You can’t manipulate the DOM or HTML, it does not improve error messages (wish it did!) and it doesn’t give you load times.
Firebug is much, much better. IE is a slacker…
Gabe Diaz
November 19th, 2008 6:38 am@Justin Web Developer lets you edit CSS and HTML on the fly as well. Load the toolbar and the options will be included in the CSS drop down and the MISC dropdown. CTRL + Shift + E for the CSS
I used alot of the plugins mentioned but can’t live without Web Developer or FireFTP. Also along with FireShot, ScreenGrab! is a must have.
Great list!
Fabryz
November 19th, 2008 6:44 amI use WebDeveloper, Firebug and Colour Contrast Analyzer
Lippe
November 19th, 2008 6:47 amI’d like to add CSSViewer, HttpFox and Screen grab! to the list.
CSSViewer: Activate it with a button, hover over your website and get the resulting CSS for the specific element in a layover. Great, because it is fast (at least faster than activating Firebug/WebDeveloper)!
HttpFox: Fiddler in Firefox
Screen grab!: Another great screenshot tool for a quick shot…
Joshua Tilson
November 19th, 2008 6:48 amThis is a great post, and I either have used most of these or currently use them. My set up right now is: Web Developer, Firebug, Colorzilla. They are all amazingly useful, However i am still missing one part that I would like to find, Is there any way to fully integrate the web development into the browser: I.E.: edit and upload all from Firefox, so i can minimize the alt + tabbing? I will implement the FireFTP for the upload part, but is there a solution similar to firebug that will allow me to edit the files from Firefox as well?
jimbo
November 19th, 2008 6:59 amIE Web Developer Toolbar is a little hokey compared to firebug. Firebug Lite can be be used to view page elements in a more “Firebuggy” style. Its basically a javascript include that you drop into your page. Not the greatest solution but definitely better. Or you could just forgot about IE altogether :)
Joel S
November 19th, 2008 7:00 amGreat list. I’m already using most of these tools, and will definitely try out the others here. Firebug,Web Developer, Yslow, and Fire FTP have changed the way work dramatically
Davd Bone
November 19th, 2008 7:03 amGreat list! With all the lists out there this one stood out for me and actually introduced me to something new and useful to my set-up.
Thanks!
db
Victor Aponte
November 19th, 2008 7:03 amVery cool post. Thanks for the info.
I’ve been using Blackbird. It’s a neat javascript widget you can include on your page to send console messages to during development and it works on most browsers.
Thanks!
Ken
November 19th, 2008 7:16 amexcellent collection. I use FireBug, but didn’t know about YSlow. Will definitely be give it a try. Dugg.
Justin
November 19th, 2008 7:19 am@Gabe Diaz – Thanks Gabe. I just started playing around, but I find it is not as easy to use as firebug. I could not select the individual cell with the inspector and then edit the css in the same window. It’s in two seperate windows. I would have to search for the tag and edit.
Firebug rules all. I just wish IE Developer would allow me to edit the CSS to help my browser testing. God how can they suck so hard when there are so many good examples of how to do things.
ahah…
Michael
November 19th, 2008 7:24 amMy favourite development tools for firefox are:
ColorZilla
CSSViewer
HTML Validator
IE Tab
MeasureIt
Screengrab
and finally Web Developer Toolbar
tomexx
November 19th, 2008 8:07 amI think Opera Dragonfly should be listed at the top of this list. It’s much more better than Firebug.