Andy Wingo scripsit: > In that case one could inspect the condition to see if it was > continuable -- given conditions, of course.
I consider it a mistake to divide conditions into continuable and non-continuable. A condition represents a particular state of affairs, whereas it is the circumstances in which an exception is raised which should determine whether it makes sense to go on. This is captured by the raise and raise-continuable procedures. > I don't have any experience with raise-continuable, unfortunately. Do > you? Alas, no. I have dealt only with guard-style systems with termination semantics. -- You escaped them by the will-death John Cowan and the Way of the Black Wheel. [email protected] I could not. --Great-Souled Sam http://www.ccil.org/~cowan _______________________________________________ Scheme-reports mailing list [email protected] http://lists.scheme-reports.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/scheme-reports
