class X::TypeCheck::Splice is X::TypeCheck does X::Comp { }

Compile time error thrown when a Macro or an unquote/hole in a quasi quote does not return an AST.

For example

use experimental :macros;
macro quasi-ast { quasi { {{{'not AST'}}} };};
say quasi-ast;

dies with

===SORRY!===
Type check failed in macro application; expected AST but got Str("not AST")

This is because you are purposefully creating something that does not evaluate to an abstract syntax tree. To fix, instead write

use experimental :macros;
macro an-ast {
    quasi { 'yes AST' }
}
say an-ast;              # OUTPUT: «yes AST␤» 

Methods §

method action §

method action(--> Str:D)

Returns a verbal description of the action that triggered the error, "macro application" or "unquote evaluation".

Type Graph §

Type relations for X::TypeCheck::Splice
perl6-type-graph X::TypeCheck::Splice X::TypeCheck::Splice X::TypeCheck X::TypeCheck X::TypeCheck::Splice->X::TypeCheck Mu Mu Any Any Any->Mu Exception Exception Exception->Any X::TypeCheck->Exception

Expand above chart

Routines supplied by class X::TypeCheck §

X::TypeCheck::Splice inherits from class X::TypeCheck, which provides the following routines:

(X::TypeCheck) method operation §

method operation(--> Str:D)

Returns a string description of the operation that failed, for example "assignment", "binding", "return".

(X::TypeCheck) method got §

method got()

Returns the object that failed to type check

(X::TypeCheck) method expected §

method expected()

Returns the type object against which the check failed.

Routines supplied by class Exception §

X::TypeCheck::Splice inherits from class Exception, which provides the following routines:

(Exception) method message §

Defined as:

method message(Exception:D: --> Str:D)

This is a stub that must be overwritten by subclasses, and should return the exception message.

Special care should be taken that this method does not produce an exception itself.

try die "Something bad happened";
if ($!{
    say $!.message# OUTPUT: «Something bad happened.␤» 
}

(Exception) method backtrace §

Defined as:

method backtrace(Exception:D:)

Returns the backtrace associated with the exception in a Backtrace object or an empty string if there is none. Only makes sense on exceptions that have been thrown at least once.

try die "Something bad happened";
with $! { .backtrace.print ; }

(Exception) method throw §

Defined as:

method throw(Exception:D:)

Throws the exception.

my $exception = X::AdHoc.new;    # Totally fine 
try $exception.throw;            # Throws 
if ($!{ #`( some handling ) }# Suppress the exception

(Exception) method resume §

Defined as:

method resume(Exception:D:)

Resumes control flow where .throw left it when handled in a CATCH block.

# For example, resume control flow for any exception 
CATCH { default { .resume } }

(Exception) method rethrow §

Defined as:

method rethrow(Exception:D:)

Rethrows an exception that has already been thrown at least once. This is different from throw in that it preserves the original backtrace.

sub f() { die 'Bad' };
sub g() { fCATCH { default { .rethrow } } };
g;
CATCH { default { say .backtrace.full } };

(Exception) routine fail §

Defined as:

multi sub    fail(Exception $e)
method       fail(Exception:D:)

Exits the calling Routine and returns a Failure object wrapping the exception.

# A custom exception defined 
class ForbiddenWord is Exception {
    has Str $.word;
    method message { "This word is forbidden: «$!word»" }
}
 
sub say-word ( $word ) {
    ForbiddenWord.new(:word($word)).fail if $word eq 'foo';
    $word.say;
}
 
my $result = say-word("foo");
say $result.exception;

The routine form works in the same way, with an alternative syntax: fail ForbiddenWord.new(:word($word)).

(Exception) method gist §

Defined as:

multi method gist(Exception:D:)

Returns whatever the exception printer should produce for this exception. The default implementation returns message and backtrace separated by a newline.

my $e = X::AdHoc.new(payload => "This exception is pretty bad");
try $e.throw;
if ($!{ say $!.gist};
# OUTPUT: «This exception is pretty bad 
#   in block <unit> at <unknown file> line 1␤»

(Exception) routine die §

Defined as:

multi sub die()
multi sub die(*@message)
multi sub die(Exception:D $e)
method    die(Exception:D:)

Throws a fatal Exception. The default exception handler prints each element of the list to $*ERR (STDERR).

die "Important reason";

If the subroutine form is called without arguments, the value of $! variable is checked. If it is set to a .DEFINITE value, its value will be used as the Exception to throw if it's of type Exception, otherwise, it will be used as payload of X::AdHoc exception. If $! is not .DEFINITE, X::AdHoc with string "Died" as payload will be thrown.

die will print by default the line number where it happens

die "Dead";
# OUTPUT: «(exit code 1) Dead␤ 
# in block <unit> at /tmp/dead.p6 line 1␤␤» 

However, that default behavior is governed at the Exception level and thus can be changed to anything we want by capturing the exception using CATCH. This can be used, for instance, to suppress line numbers.

CATCH {
  default {
    .payload.say
  }
};
die "Dead" # OUTPUT: «Dead␤» 

(Exception) sub warn §

Defined as:

multi sub warn(*@message)

Throws a resumable warning exception, which is considered a control exception, and hence is invisible to most normal exception handlers. The outermost control handler will print the warning to $*ERR. After printing the warning, the exception is resumed where it was thrown. To override this behavior, catch the exception in a CONTROL block. A quietly {...} block is the opposite of a try {...} block in that it will suppress any warnings but pass fatal exceptions through.

To simply print to $*ERR, please use note instead. warn should be reserved for use in threatening situations when you don't quite want to throw an exception.

warn "Warning message";
Generated from