|
|
1.1 ! root 1: .th ERROR FILES ! 2: .sh NAME ! 3: \&.../files/error7_? \- files with \*(II errors ! 4: .sh DESCRIPTION ! 5: These files contain the \*(II error messages. ! 6: There is one file ! 7: for each thousands digit; ! 8: e.g., ! 9: error number 2313 will be in file error7_2. ! 10: .s3 ! 11: Each file consists of a sequence of error messages ! 12: with associated error numbers. ! 13: When an error enters the front end, ! 14: the appropriate file is scanned for the correct error number. ! 15: If found, the message is printed; ! 16: otherwise, ! 17: the first message parameter is printed. ! 18: .s3 ! 19: Each message has the format ! 20: .br ! 21: errnum <TAB> message tilde. ! 22: .br ! 23: Messages are terminated ! 24: by the tilde character (`~'). ! 25: The message is scanned before printing. ! 26: If the sequence ! 27: .bd %\c ! 28: .it n ! 29: is encountered ! 30: (where ! 31: .it n ! 32: is a digit from 0 to 9), ! 33: parameter ! 34: .it n ! 35: is substituted, ! 36: where %0 is the first parameter. ! 37: .s3 ! 38: The parameters can be in any order. ! 39: For example, ! 40: an error message can reference %2 before it ! 41: references %0. ! 42: .sh EXAMPLE ! 43: .nf ! 44: 1003 line %0, bad database name %1~ ! 45: 1005 In the purge of %1, a bad %0 caused execution to halt~ ! 46: 1006 No process, try again.~ ! 47: .fi
This archive runs on limited infrastructure. Preserving old code on modern bandwidth. Automated agents are requested to crawl responsibly.