You mean like a code debugger not in VS Code? I mean… IntelliJ offers pretty amazing built-in debugging functionality. And as a bonus, they’re located in Prague, so you’re supporting a EU company by using IntelliJ.
No, I meant something like this, but for Linux. Not a command line tool, not some janky wrapper around the command line tool, not another IDE that would force me to abandon my current setup (Kate + Language Servers).
And no, I don’t care about “scripts”, my usecase (game development) isn’t about creating software with minimal interaction. I also don’t care about Mortal Kombat Fatality-tier key combinations a la Vim.
I don’t know what to tell you, but a debugger is usually shipped with an IDE. If your IDE doesn’t ship with a debugger then that’s an issue completely independent from any OS that you’re using. When I write C# programs in Visual Studio, I use the Visual Studio debugger. When I write games in Godot, I use the Godot debugger. When I write games in Unreal, I use the Unreal debugger. When I write Web Applications in IntelliJ, I use the IntelliJ Debugger. Your use case just seems extremely strange.
That being said, I’m sure there is a tool out there that does what you’re looking for. I’m just not sure you should be looking for it.
Okay, is there any debugger with a GUI, that isn’t just the command line interface in either a separate window or just a tab in VSCode?
You mean like a code debugger not in VS Code? I mean… IntelliJ offers pretty amazing built-in debugging functionality. And as a bonus, they’re located in Prague, so you’re supporting a EU company by using IntelliJ.
No, I meant something like this, but for Linux. Not a command line tool, not some janky wrapper around the command line tool, not another IDE that would force me to abandon my current setup (Kate + Language Servers).
And no, I don’t care about “scripts”, my usecase (game development) isn’t about creating software with minimal interaction. I also don’t care about Mortal Kombat Fatality-tier key combinations a la Vim.
I don’t know what to tell you, but a debugger is usually shipped with an IDE. If your IDE doesn’t ship with a debugger then that’s an issue completely independent from any OS that you’re using. When I write C# programs in Visual Studio, I use the Visual Studio debugger. When I write games in Godot, I use the Godot debugger. When I write games in Unreal, I use the Unreal debugger. When I write Web Applications in IntelliJ, I use the IntelliJ Debugger. Your use case just seems extremely strange.
That being said, I’m sure there is a tool out there that does what you’re looking for. I’m just not sure you should be looking for it.