$ERROR: Difference between revisions
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{{PageExamples}} | {{PageExamples}} | ||
{{CodeStart}} | {{CodeStart}} | ||
{{Cm|$IF}} {{Text|VERSION|#55FF55}} < {{Text|2.1|#F580B1}} {{ | {{Cm|$IF}} {{Text|VERSION|#55FF55}} < {{Text|2.1|#F580B1}} {{Cm|OR (boolean)|OR}} {{Text|WINDOWS|#55FF55}} = {{Text|0|#F580B1}} {{Cm|THEN}} | ||
{{Cm|$ERROR}} Requires Windows QB64 version 2.1 or above | {{Cm|$ERROR}} Requires Windows QB64 version 2.1 or above | ||
{{Cm|$END IF}} | {{Cm|$END IF}} |
Latest revision as of 20:11, 28 March 2023
The $ERROR metacommand triggers a compilation error.
Syntax
- $ERROR message
Description
- This metacommand does not require a comment ' or REM before it.
- message is any text. Quotation marks are not required.
- When QB64 tries to compile an $ERROR metacommand a compilation error is triggered and message is shown to the user. This is useful in $IF blocks.
- If there is a particular situation where you know your program will not work properly, you can prevent the user compiling and give them a helpful error message instead by checking for the condition with $IF.
- An $ERROR directive not inside an conditional $IF (or $ELSEIF) block is useless because the program will never compile in that case.
Examples
$IF VERSION < 2.1 OR WINDOWS = 0 THEN $ERROR Requires Windows QB64 version 2.1 or above $END IF |
- Output (IDE Status Area)
- Compilation check failed: REQUIRES WINDOWS QB64 VERSION 2.1 OR ABOVE on line 2 (assuming your version of QB64 doesn't meet those requirements).
See also