bgerror man page on BSDOS

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bgerror(n)	      Tcl Built-In Commands	       bgerror(n)

_________________________________________________________________

NAME
       bgerror - Command invoked to process background errors

SYNOPSIS
       bgerror message
_________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION
       The bgerror command doesn't exist as built-in part of Tcl.
       Instead, individual applications or  users  can	define	a
       bgerror	command (e.g. as a Tcl procedure) if they wish to
       handle background errors.

       A background error is one that occurs in an event  handler
       or  some	 other	command	 that  didn't  originate with the
       application.  For example, if an error occurs  while  exe-
       cuting a command specified with the after command, then it
       is a background error.  For a  non-background  error,  the
       error can simply be returned up through nested Tcl command
       evaluations until it reaches the	 top-level  code  in  the
       application;  then the application can report the error in
       whatever way it wishes.	When a background  error  occurs,
       the  unwinding  ends  in	 the  Tcl library and there is no
       obvious way for Tcl to report the error.

       When Tcl detects a background error, it saves  information
       about  the  error and invokes the bgerror command later as
       an idle	event  handler.	  Before  invoking  bgerror,  Tcl
       restores	 the  errorInfo	 and errorCode variables to their
       values at the time the error  occurred,	then  it  invokes
       bgerror	with the error message as its only argument.  Tcl
       assumes that the application has implemented  the  bgerror
       command,	 and  that the command will report the error in a
       way that makes sense for the application.  Tcl will ignore
       any  result  returned by the bgerror command as long as no
       error is generated.

       If another Tcl error occurs  within  the	 bgerror  command
       (for example, because no bgerror command has been defined)
       then Tcl reports the error itself by writing a message  to
       stderr.

       If  several background errors accumulate before bgerror is
       invoked to process them, bgerror will be invoked once  for
       each error, in the order they occurred.	However, if bger-
       ror returns with a break	 exception,  then  any	remaining
       errors are skipped without calling bgerror.

       Tcl  has	 no default implementation for bgerror.	 However,
       in applications using Tk there will be a	 default  bgerror
       procedure  that	posts  a  dialog box containing the error

Tcl			       7.5				1

bgerror(n)	      Tcl Built-In Commands	       bgerror(n)

       message and offers the user a chance to see a stack  trace
       showing where the error occurred.

KEYWORDS
       background error, reporting

Tcl			       7.5				2

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