NAME
SDL2::error - Simple Error Message Routines for SDL
SYNOPSIS
use SDL2 qw[:error];
DESCRIPTION
Functions in this import tag provide simple error message routines for SDL. SDL_GetError( )
|/SDL_GetError( )
>> can be called for almost all SDL functions to determine what problems are occurring. Check the wiki page of each specific SDL function to see whether SDL_GetError( )
is meaningful for them or not. These functions may be imported with the :error
tag.
Functions
The SDL error messages are in English.
SDL_SetError( ... )
Set the SDL error message for the current thread.
Calling this function will replace any previous error message that was set.
This function always returns -1
, since SDL frequently uses -1
to signify an failing result, leading to this idiom:
if ($error_code) {
return SDL_SetError( 'This operation has failed: %d', $error_code );
}
Expected parameters:
fmt
-
a
printf( )
-style message format string @params
-
additional parameters matching % tokens in the
fmt
string, if any
SDL_GetError( )
Retrieve a message about the last error that occurred on the current thread.
warn SDL_GetError( );
It is possible for multiple errors to occur before calling SDL_GetError( )
. Only the last error is returned.
The message is only applicable when an SDL function has signaled an error. You must check the return values of SDL function calls to determine when to appropriately call SDL_GetError( )
. You should not use the results of SDL_GetError( )
to decide if an error has occurred! Sometimes SDL will set an error string even when reporting success.
SDL will not clear the error string for successful API calls. You must check return values for failure cases before you can assume the error string applies.
Error strings are set per-thread, so an error set in a different thread will not interfere with the current thread's operation.
The returned string is internally allocated and must not be freed by the application.
Returns a message with information about the specific error that occurred, or an empty string if there hasn't been an error message set since the last call to SDL_ClearError( )
. The message is only applicable when an SDL function has signaled an error. You must check the return values of SDL function calls to determine when to appropriately call SDL_GetError( )
.
SDL_GetErrorMsg( ... )
Get the last error message that was set for the current thread.
my $x;
warn SDL_GetErrorMsg($x, 300);
This allows the caller to copy the error string into a provided buffer, but otherwise operates exactly the same as SDL_GetError( )
.
errstr
-
A buffer to fill with the last error message that was set for the current thread
maxlen
-
The size of the buffer pointed to by the errstr parameter
Returns the pointer passed in as the errstr
parameter.
SDL_ClearError( )
Clear any previous error message for this thread.
SDL_ClearError( );
SDL_Error( ... )
Set the current error to a member of the <SDL_errorcode
enum.
SDL_Error( SDL_EFWRITE );
Unconditionally returns -1
.
Enumerations
These are defined for your use!
SDL_errorcode
These values may be imported with the :errorcode
tag.
SDL_ENOMEM
- Out of memorySDL_EFREAD
- Error reading fileSDL_EFWRITE
- Error writing fileSDL_EFSEEK
- Error seeking in fileSDL_UNSUPPORTED
SDL_LASTERROR
LICENSE
Copyright (C) Sanko Robinson.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms found in the Artistic License 2. Other copyrights, terms, and conditions may apply to data transmitted through this module.
AUTHOR
Sanko Robinson <sanko@cpan.org>