That gets mixed with console logs from user scripts, making it difficult to distinguish between the two. The original console is usually a place where Postman logs its internal debugging entries.The internal JavaScript console of electron (using which Postman is built with) is available for use, then why make a separate console? If you know your way around console.log in Javascript, this is exactly the same. More details on how I do it is a discussion for the future.
Postman download entire code#
But not any more, as I can now put or console.warn at appropriate locations in my scripts and extract the exact line of code that is acting up.
And when I manage to mess them up, debugging it becomes even more complicated.
The backstory on this is very simple – I have test scripts in Postman Collections that do some really complicated stuff. The last item ( console.log output) is the another compelling reason why I keep going back to Postman Console.