\variable{errno} \synopsis{Error code set by system functions} \usage{Int_Type errno} \description A system function can fail for a variety of reasons. For example, a file operation may fail because lack of disk space, or the process does not have permission to perform the operation. Such functions will return -1 and set the variable \ivar{errno} to an error code describing the reason for failure. Particular values of \ivar{errno} may be specified by the following symbolic constants (read-only variables) and the corresponding \ifun{errno_string} value: #v+ E2BIG "Arg list too long" EACCES "Permission denied" EBADF "Bad file number" EBUSY "Mount device busy" ECHILD "No children" EEXIST "File exists" EFAULT "Bad address" EFBIG "File too large" EINTR "Interrupted system call" EINVAL "Invalid argument" EIO "I/O error" EISDIR "Is a directory" ELOOP "Too many levels of symbolic links" EMFILE "Too many open files" EMLINK "Too many links" ENAMETOOLONG "File name too long" ENFILE "File table overflow" ENODEV "No such device" ENOENT "No such file or directory" ENOEXEC "Exec format error" ENOMEM "Not enough core" ENOSPC "No space left on device" ENOTBLK "Block device required" ENOTDIR "Not a directory" ENOTEMPTY "Directory not empty" ENOTTY "Not a typewriter" ENXIO "No such device or address" EPERM "Operation not permitted" EPIPE "Broken pipe" EROFS "Read-only file system" ESPIPE "Illegal seek" ESRCH "No such process" ETXTBSY "Text file busy" EXDEV "Cross-device link" #v- \example The \ifun{mkdir} function will attempt to create a directory. If it fails, the function will throw an IOError exception with a message containing the string representation of the \ivar{errno} value. #v+ if (-1 == mkdir (dir)) throw IOError, sprintf ("mkdir %s failed: %s", dir, errno_string (errno)); #v- \seealso{errno_string, error, mkdir} \done \function{errno_string} \synopsis{Return a string describing an errno.} \usage{String_Type errno_string ( [Int_Type err ])} \description The \ifun{errno_string} function returns a string describing the integer errno code \exmp{err}. If the \exmp{err} parameter is omitted, the current value of \ivar{errno} will be used. See the description for \ivar{errno} for more information. \example The \ifun{errno_string} function may be used as follows: #v+ define sizeof_file (file) { variable st = stat_file (file); if (st == NULL) throw IOError, sprintf ("%s: %s", file, errno_string (errno)); return st.st_size; } #v- \seealso{errno, stat_file} \done \function{error} \synopsis{Generate an error condition (deprecated)} \usage{error (String_Type msg)} \description This function has been deprecated in favor of \kw{throw}. The \ifun{error} function generates a \slang \exc{RunTimeError} exception. It takes a single string parameter which is displayed on the stderr output device. \example #v+ define add_txt_extension (file) { if (typeof (file) != String_Type) error ("add_extension: parameter must be a string"); file += ".txt"; return file; } #v- \seealso{verror, message} \done \function{__get_exception_info} \synopsis{Get information about the current exception} \usage{Struct_Type __get_exception_info ()} \description This function returns information about the currently active exception in the form as a structure with the following fields: #v+ error The current exception, e.g., RunTimeError descr A description of the exception file Name of the file generating the exception line Line number where the exception originated function Function where the exception originated object A user-defined object thrown by the exception message A user-defined message traceback Traceback messages #v- If no exception is active, \NULL will be returned. This same information may also be obtained via the optional argument to the \kw{try} statement: #v+ variable e = NULL; try (e) { do_something (); } finally { if (e != NULL) vmessage ("An error occurred: %s", e.message); } #v- \seealso{error} \done \function{message} \synopsis{Print a string onto the message device} \usage{message (String_Type s)} \description The \ifun{message} function will print the string specified by \exmp{s} onto the message device. \example #v+ define print_current_time () { message (time ()); } #v- \notes The message device will depend upon the application. For example, the output message device for the \jed editor corresponds to the line at the bottom of the display window. The default message device is the standard output device. \seealso{vmessage, sprintf, error} \done \function{new_exception} \synopsis{Create a new exception} \usage{new_exception (String_Type name, Int_Type baseclass, String_Type descr)} \description This function creates a new exception called \exmp{name} subclassed upon \exmp{baseclass}. The description of the exception is specified by \exmp{descr}. \example #v+ new_exception ("MyError", RunTimeError, "My very own error"); try { if (something_is_wrong ()) throw MyError; } catch RunTimeError; #v- In this case, catching \exc{RunTimeError} will also catch \exmp{MyError} since it is a subclass of \exc{RunTimeError}. \seealso{error, verror} \done \function{usage} \synopsis{Generate a usage error} \usage{usage (String_Type msg)} \description The \ifun{usage} function generates a \exc{UsageError} exception and displays \exmp{msg} to the message device. \example Suppose that a function called \exmp{plot} plots an array of \exmp{x} and \exmp{y} values. Then such a function could be written to issue a usage message if the wrong number of arguments was passed: #v+ define plot () { variable x, y; if (_NARGS != 2) usage ("plot (x, y)"); (x, y) = (); % Now do the hard part . . } #v- \seealso{error, message} \done \function{verror} \synopsis{Generate an error condition (deprecated)} \usage{verror (String_Type fmt, ...)} \description This function has been deprecated in favor or \kw{throw}. The \ifun{verror} function performs the same role as the \ifun{error} function. The only difference is that instead of a single string argument, \ifun{verror} takes a sprintf style argument list. \example #v+ define open_file (file) { variable fp; fp = fopen (file, "r"); if (fp == NULL) verror ("Unable to open %s", file); return fp; } #v- \notes In the current implementation, the \ifun{verror} function is not an intrinsic function. Rather it is a predefined \slang function using a combination of \ifun{sprintf} and \ifun{error}. To generate a specific exception, a \kw{throw} statement should be used. In fact, a \kw{throw} statement such as: #v+ if (fp == NULL) throw OpenError, "Unable to open $file"$; #v- is preferable to the use of \ifun{verror} in the above example. \seealso{error, Sprintf, vmessage} \done \function{vmessage} \synopsis{Print a formatted string onto the message device} \usage{vmessage (String_Type fmt, ...)} \description The \ifun{vmessage} function formats a sprintf style argument list and displays the resulting string onto the message device. \notes In the current implementation, the \ifun{vmessage} function is not an intrinsic function. Rather it is a predefined \slang function using a combination of \ifun{Sprintf} and \ifun{message}. \seealso{message, sprintf, Sprintf, verror} \done