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Guile provides a set of convenience procedures for signaling error conditions that are implemented on top of the exception primitives just described.
Raise an error with key misc-error
and a message constructed by
displaying msg and writing arg ....
Raise an error with key key. subr can be a string
naming the procedure associated with the error, or #f
.
message is the error message string, possibly containing
~S
and ~A
escapes. When an error is reported,
these are replaced by formatting the corresponding members of
args: ~A
(was %s
in older versions of
Guile) formats using display
and ~S
(was
%S
) formats using write
. data is a list or
#f
depending on key: if key is
system-error
then it should be a list containing the
Unix errno
value; If key is signal
then it
should be a list containing the Unix signal number; If
key is out-of-range
, wrong-type-arg
,
or keyword-argument-error
,
it is a list containing the bad value; otherwise
it will usually be #f
.
Return the Unix error message corresponding to err, an integer
errno
value.
When setlocale
has been called (see Locales), the message
is in the language and charset of LC_MESSAGES
. (This is done
by the C library.)
Returns the result of evaluating its argument; however
if an exception occurs then #f
is returned instead.
Next: Dynamic Wind, Previous: Exceptions, Up: Control Mechanisms [Contents][Index]