InvalidSortSpecification class: Difference between revisions
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Remember that catching an exception is done with the <var>[[Catch statement|Catch]]</var> statement; if an exception condition occurs outside a | Remember that catching an exception is done with the <var>[[Catch statement|Catch]]</var> statement; if an exception condition occurs outside a | ||
<var>Catch</var> for it, the request is cancelled. | <var>Catch</var> for it, the request is cancelled. | ||
Actually, the <var>InvalidSortSpecification</var> is rarely used. One possible circumstance for using it would be if a sort specification is entered (at least in | |||
part) by an end user, and then a <code>[[Try statement|try]].../catch invalidSortSpecification</code> block might be appropriate, as shown here: | |||
part by an end user, a < | <p class="code"> %sortSpec = $read('Enter sort specification') | ||
<p class="code"> try %strlist:sort(%sortSpec) | try %strlist:sort(%sortSpec) | ||
catch invalidSortSpecification | catch invalidSortSpecification | ||
Print 'Invalid ...' | Print 'Invalid ...' | ||
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end try | end try | ||
</p> | </p> | ||
In most cases, however, a sort specification is explicitly coded in the <var>User Language</var> request (for example, rather than <code>%sortSpec = $read...</code> as above, something like <code>%sortSpec = '1,10,CH,A'</code>), and so the sort specification should | |||
always be correct and request cancellation is an appropriate action, that is, <b>do not</b> use the <code>try.../catch</code> block as above. | |||
The <var>InvalidSortSpecification</var> class is available as of <var class="product">[[Category:System exception classes]]</var> version 7.9. | The <var>InvalidSortSpecification</var> class is available as of <var class="product">[[Category:System exception classes]]</var> version 7.9. |
Revision as of 19:06, 9 June 2011
An InvalidSortSpecification exception indicates that the first argument provided to either the
Sort or
SortNew method (in the Stringlist class) is not a valid sort specification.
This exception class has no properties. The class's only method is the New constructor, which you would typically use with a User Language Throw statement to produce an InvalidSortSpecification exception. For example:
throw %(invalidSortSpecification):new
Remember that catching an exception is done with the Catch statement; if an exception condition occurs outside a Catch for it, the request is cancelled.
Actually, the InvalidSortSpecification is rarely used. One possible circumstance for using it would be if a sort specification is entered (at least in
part) by an end user, and then a try.../catch invalidSortSpecification
block might be appropriate, as shown here:
%sortSpec = $read('Enter sort specification') try %strlist:sort(%sortSpec) catch invalidSortSpecification Print 'Invalid ...' ... end try
In most cases, however, a sort specification is explicitly coded in the User Language request (for example, rather than %sortSpec = $read...
as above, something like %sortSpec = '1,10,CH,A'
), and so the sort specification should
always be correct and request cancellation is an appropriate action, that is, do not use the try.../catch
block as above.
The InvalidSortSpecification class is available as of version 7.9.
The InvalidSortSpecification methods
The following are the available InvalidSortSpecification class methods.
Method | Description |
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New | Create a new InvalidSortSpecification object |
The methods in the class are described in the subsections that follow. In addition:
- "Notation conventions for methods" has information about the conventions followed.
- "InvalidSortSpecification methods syntax" is a single page that contains the syntax diagrams of all the methods in the class.
New constructor
Create a new InvalidSortSpecification object (InvalidSortSpecification class)
[Introduced in Sirius Mods 7.9]
This callable constructor generates an instance of an InvalidSortSpecification exception. The New constructor format follows:
Syntax
%invalidSortSpecification = [%(InvalidSortSpecification):]New
Syntax terms
%invalidSortSpecification | An InvalidSortSpecification %variable which will refer to the newly created object. |
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%(InvalidSortSpecification) | The class name in parentheses denotes a shared method. New can also be invoked via an InvalidSortSpecification object variable. |