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Procedures and Loops can be nested. Hence, SIC may operate at
different Levels of Execution. Commands are provided to activate
some level (@, FOR), suspend (PAUSE), resume
(CONTINUE) or abort its execution (NEXT, QUIT, BREAK, RETURN).
Errors occuring within a non-interactive execution level generate
a PAUSE, which returns interactive control to the user at a level
immediately higher. The prompt at level I changes to 'SIC_I> ' to
remind the user what SIC is doing.
It is also possible to interrupt a sequence of commands (procedure or loop)
by pressing <^C> at any time. The current command is
then normally completed (unless it traps the <^C> by itself),
but a PAUSE is generated when the command terminates.
Related commands :
-
- BREAK
Aborts Loop execution without generating an error. The loop is
considered to have completed successfully, and execution resumes at
the command line following the NEXT command of the loop.
- CONTINUE
resumes Procedure or Loop execution after a PAUSE , either
explicit or generated because of an error condition. C is always
a non ambiguous abbreviation of CONTINUE, unless you redefine
it as a Symbol.
- EXIT
exit from the program.
- NEXT
The effect of this command depends on the context:
- If encountered while entering loop commands (during loop
compilation), it ends the loop definition and activates its
execution.
- If encountered during loop execution, all commands left in
the loop are skipped and loop execution starts again for next
index value. This typically occurs when it is specified as error
handling (ON ERROR NEXT), or typed interactively after a PAUSE has occured.
- PAUSE
sets a break point in the Loop or a Procedure. PAUSE returns
control to the user when executed in any of the non-interactive modes
(Loop and Procedures). Any valid command can be executed while in
interrupt mode. The normal execution of the interrupted level can be
resumed by typing CONTINUE . NEXT and QUIT may also
be valid continuation sequences. The PAUSE command can be followed by
a character string argument which is printed before the PAUSE becomes
effective.
- QUIT
If QUIT is typed after a PAUSE occured in a Procedure or
Loop, the execution of the interrupted procedure is aborted, and one
returns to the previous level of execution. In this case, an error
condition is transmitted to the previous level to allow the user to
take the appropriate decision.
- RETURN
Terminates procedure execution, and returns to the previous level of
execution. An implicit RETURN is always executed at the end of
the command file. Command RETURN BASE returns
to the normal interactive level (level 0). Command RETURN ERROR
returns to the previous level of execution, but
also transmit an error status to this level.
Next: Error Recovery
Up: SIC as a programming
Previous: Structured Programming and Logical
Gildas manager
2001-04-18