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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T16:42:59+00:00 2026-05-10T16:42:59+00:00

There are many ways of doing debugging, using a debugger is one, but the

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There are many ways of doing debugging, using a debugger is one, but the simple one for the humble, lazy, programmer is to just add a bunch of print statements to your code.

i.e.

 def foo(x):      print 'Hey wow, we got to foo!', x       ...       print 'foo is returning:', bar      return bar 

Is there a proper name for this style of debugging?

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  1. 2026-05-10T16:43:00+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 4:43 pm

    Yes – it’s known as printf() debugging, named after the ubiquitous C function:

    Used to describe debugging work done by inserting commands that output more or less carefully chosen status information at key points in the program flow, observing that information and deducing what’s wrong based on that information.

    — printf() debugging@everything2

    Native users of other languages no doubt refer to it by the default print / log / or trace command available for their coding platform of choice, but i’ve heard the ‘printf()’ name used to refere to this technique in many languages other than C. Perhaps this is due to its history: while BASIC and FORTRAN had basic but serviceable PRINT commands, C generally required a bit more work to format various data types: printf() was (and often still is) by far the most convenient means to this end, providing many built-in formatting options. Its cousin, fprintf(), takes another parameter, the stream to write to: this allowed a careful ‘debugger’ to direct diagnostic information to stderr (possibly itself redirected to a log file) while leaving the output of the program uncorrupted.

    Although often looked down on by users of modern debugging software, printf() debugging continues to prove itself indispensable: the wildly popular FireBug tool for the Firefox web browser (and similar tools now available for other browsers) is built around a console window into which web page scripts can log errors or diagnostic messages containing formatted data.

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