Breadboards are invaluable for that. They’re not perfect, but they’re not nearly as bad as you make them out to be. All sorts of things work perfectly fine on breadboards, as shown by the gazillions of people who use them.
You are falling into a standard trap: "selection bias". People that have had problems and were discouraged simply moved onto other things and aren't going to write about it.
Analogy: asking people that walk into roads without looking about their experiences
I am doing nothing of the sort. Selection bias is a violation of methods to achieve a representative sample; I wasn’t ever claiming to do a sample of any kind, never mind representative, nor any kind of data analysis at all. I said simply that plenty of people build plenty of functional circuits on breadboards, and that is true. I said nothing about success rates.
Selection bias is usually unwitting, and often not recognised by the person making that error.
:::whoosh:::
That was the sound of my point going right over your head: selection bias is a
sampling error, which means one must be attempting to create a representative sample. But I never claimed to be attempting that, and on the contrary, expressly told you that it’s not. (Nor are your claims based on one either, and that’s ok.)
My statement is simply this: many people use breadboards successfully, and there is ample evidence to support this.
That’s it.
Your attitude is one of them being so unreliable and unpredictable as to make them effectively useless, and I think that’s an unfair characterization, and one you make with dishonest arguments, for reasons I’ve already explained in more detail than you deserve (given the rotten attitude you exhibit).