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Every warning has a textual message, which explains the problem for the user, and a severity level which is a symbol. Here are the possible severity levels, in order of decreasing severity, and their meanings:
:emergency
A problem that will seriously impair Emacs operation soon if you do not attend to it promptly.
:error
A report of data or circumstances that are inherently wrong.
:warning
A report of data or circumstances that are not inherently wrong, but raise suspicion of a possible problem.
:debug
A report of information that may be useful if you are debugging.
When your program encounters invalid input data, it can either signal a Lisp
error by calling error
or signal
or report a warning with
severity :error
. Signaling a Lisp error is the easiest thing to do,
but it means the program cannot continue processing. If you want to take
the trouble to implement a way to continue processing despite the bad data,
then reporting a warning of severity :error
is the right way to
inform the user of the problem. For instance, the Emacs Lisp byte compiler
can report an error that way and continue compiling other functions. (If
the program signals a Lisp error and then handles it with
condition-case
, the user won't see the error message; it could show
the message to the user by reporting it as a warning.)
Each warning has a warning type to classify it. The type is a list of
symbols. The first symbol should be the custom group that you use for the
program's user options. For example, byte compiler warnings use the warning
type (bytecomp)
. You can also subcategorize the warnings, if you
wish, by using more symbols in the list.
This function reports a warning, using message as the message and
type as the warning type. level should be the severity level,
with :warning
being the default.
buffer-name, if non-nil
, specifies the name of the buffer for
logging the warning. By default, it is ‘*Warnings*’.
This function reports a warning using the value of (format
message args...)
as the message. In other respects it is
equivalent to display-warning
.
This function reports a warning using the value of (format
message args...)
as the message, (emacs)
as the type,
and :warning
as the severity level. It exists for compatibility
only; we recommend not using it, because you should specify a specific
warning type.
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Ce document a été généré par Eric Reinbold le 13 Octobre 2007 en utilisant texi2html 1.78.