David,

I don't think that it works this way. Probably, the try control structure only determines whether a script keeps running after an error, if possible, and whether an errorDialog message is sent. I don't think that an additional check is made with the execution of each individual line. The error handling features are just waiting passively for an error to occur.

--
Best regards,

Mark Schonewille

Economy-x-Talk Consulting and Software Engineering
http://economy-x-talk.com
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On 27 jul 2008, at 13:17, David Bovill wrote:

Good to know its fast, but I guess my concern is that a "try" statement
would slow down each line of a script, and so the speed hit would be a
factor of how long the script was.

Not sure why, but I always assumed it would work a bit like debugging or using the "do" statement and significantly slow things down, so I've not
used it to wrap long complex scripts.

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