WHENEVER instruction
Use the WHENEVER instruction to define how exceptions must be
handled for the rest of the module.
Syntax
WHENEVER exception-class
exception-actionwhere exception-class is one of:
{ [ANY] ERROR
| [ANY] SQLERROR
| NOT FOUND
| WARNING
}and exception-action is one of:
{ CONTINUE
| STOP
| CALL [module.]function
| RAISE
| GOTO label
}
- function can be any function name defined in the program.
- module is the name of a module imported with
IMPORT FGL. - label must be a label defined in the current program block (main, function or report routine).
Usage
The WHENEVER instruction defines the exception handling by
associating an exception
class with an exception
action.
WHENEVER instruction is similar to a C preprocessor
macro: Its effect is local to the module and defines the error handling for the rest of the module,
unless a new WHENEVER instruction is encountered by the compiler, or a
TRY/CATCH block is used. A WHENEVER instruction defines only the
exception handling for that module and therefore does not affect callers. Use the instruction
WHENEVER ERROR RAISE to propagate exceptions occuring in the module.If no WHENEVER instruction is used, the default is WHENEVER ERROR
STOP. Stopping the program in case of error is the recommended default. However, this
default does not catch expression errors like type conversion errors. Consider using the
fglrun.mapAnyErrorToError FGLPROFILE entry, to catch conversion errors. For more
details, see Default exception handling.
This code example shows a typical WHENEVER instruction
usage:
WHENEVER ERROR CONTINUE
DROP TABLE mytable -- SQL error will be ignored
CREATE TABLE mytable ( k INT, c VARCHAR(20) )
WHENEVER ERROR STOP
IF SQLCA.SQLCODE != 0 THEN
ERROR "Could not create the table..."
END IF
TRY/CATCH block, a WHENEVER ERROR CONTINUE exception
handler does not stop the evaluation of an expression. For example, in the expression [(Pi() / 0) + Pi()] (where
Pi() is a user function returning the number Pi), the function is called twice,
even if the division by zero produces error -1202. This behavior exists to be
compatible with Informix 4GL legacy code.Exception classes ERROR and SQLERROR are synonyms: In the
previous example it is also possible to use WHENEVER SQLERROR instead of
WHENEVER ERROR.
Actions for classes ERROR, WARNING and NOT
FOUND can be set independently:
WHENEVER ERROR STOP
WHENEVER WARNING CONTINUE
WHENEVER NOT FOUND GOTO not_found_handler
...
WHENEVER instruction is local to the current module, and
applies to all source lines following that instruction (cross-function definitions). In the next
example, module1.4gl uses a WHENEVER instruction that takes
effect in the second function, but does not affect the calling module
main.4gl:$ head module1.4gl main.4gl
==> module1.4gl <==
FUNCTION function1()
WHENEVER ANY ERROR CONTINUE -- applies to subsequent lines
END FUNCTION
FUNCTION function2()
DEFINE x INTEGER
LET x = "aaa"
DISPLAY "function2: x = ", x, " STATUS = ", STATUS
END FUNCTION
==> main.4gl <==
IMPORT FGL module1
MAIN
DEFINE x INTEGER
WHENEVER ANY ERROR STOP
CALL module1.function2()
LET x = "aaa"
END MAIN
$ fglcomp main.4gl && fglrun main.42m
function2: x = STATUS = -1213
Program stopped at 'main.4gl', line number 6.
FORMS statement error number -1213.
A character to numeric conversion process failed.In the above example, the error -1213 in line 6 of main.4gl is expected,
because the WHENEVER instruction of the main.4gl module
applies.
WHENEVER ... CALL function instruction, the program flow
will go to the specified function and return to the code block where the exception
occurred:MAIN
DEFINE x INTEGER
WHENEVER ANY ERROR CALL error_handler
-- WHENEVER handler takes effect
LET x = 1/0
DISPLAY "Back in MAIN..."
END MAIN
FUNCTION error_handler()
DISPLAY "error_handler: ", STATUS
END FUNCTION
-- output:
error_handler: -1202
Back in MAIN...
WHENEVER ... CALL instruction, do not specify parentheses after the
function name.TRY/CATCH
block takes precedence over the last WHENEVER instruction, see the following
example:MAIN
DEFINE x INTEGER
WHENEVER ANY ERROR CONTINUE
-- WHENEVER handler takes effect
LET x = 1/0
DISPLAY "WHENEVER: ", STATUS
-- WHENEVER handler is hidden by TRY/CATCH block
TRY
LET x = 1/0
CATCH
DISPLAY "CATCH : ", STATUS
END TRY
-- WHENEVER handler takes again effect
CALL func()
END MAIN
FUNCTION func()
DEFINE x INTEGER
LET x = 1/0
DISPLAY "WHENEVER: ", STATUS
END FUNCTION
-- Output:
WHENEVER: -1202
CATCH : -1202
WHENEVER: -1202
RAISE option can be used to propagate exceptions to the caller, which
typically traps the error in a TRY/CATCH
block:-- main.4gl
IMPORT FGL myutils
MAIN
TRY
-- Pass a NULL form name to get error -1110
CALL myutils.open_form(NULL)
CATCH
DISPLAY "Error: ", status
END TRY
END MAIN
-- myutils.4gl
FUNCTION open_form(fn)
DEFINE fn STRING
WHENEVER ERROR RAISE -- Propagate exceptions to caller
OPEN FORM f1 FROM fn
END FUNCTIONWHENEVER [ANY] ERROR RAISE is not supported
in a REPORT routine.