From: skaller <skaller@users.sourceforge.net>
To: caml-list@inria.fr
Subject: Seeking exception source
Date: Tue, 08 Nov 2005 13:13:53 +1100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <1131416033.23991.57.camel@rosella> (raw)
I am occasionally annoyed by Not_found propagating to my
top level function .. meaning the error could be anywhere
at all in my program.
I usually do this rubbish to fix it:
...... e ...... (* where e might raise an exception *)
==>
.... begin try e
with Not_found -> failwith "Not_found at So and So" end ...
and then litter the code with such things until I've found
where the problem is. This is very bad.
A better way? Something like this:
let f x ... = ....
===>
let f x ... = begin try
......
with (x:exn) -> wrap "in function f" x end
where
let wrap s x = raise (TaggedExn ( s,x))
The idea is that every exception continues to propagate
as normal .. but it gets a tag of where it came from
wrapped around it. The handler can then report it.
This mechanism is no use in a recursive function, nor where
some exception can legitimately escape .. however both these
could be taken into account: the general idea is to add
a symbolic stack backtrace to exceptions which represent
errors that WILL propagate to the top level (ie. underflow
the stack).
Any ideas how to do that? Perhaps a camlp4 thing to instrument
marked functions? Although it isn't clear catching exceptions
costs anything if none are thrown (other than code bloat)?
[Actually in C the macro __LINE__ solves this .. but caml
doesn't have such macros ..]
--
John Skaller <skaller at users dot sf dot net>
Felix, successor to C++: http://felix.sf.net
next reply other threads:[~2005-11-08 2:13 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 6+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2005-11-08 2:13 skaller [this message]
2005-11-08 2:57 ` [Caml-list] " Jon Harrop
2005-11-08 9:06 ` Nicolas Cannasse
2005-11-08 10:30 ` Alessandro Baretta
2005-11-08 10:06 ` Nicolas Cannasse
2005-11-08 10:34 ` skaller
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