Glib::Error(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Glib::Error(3pm) |
Glib::Error - Exception Objects based on GError
eval { my $pixbuf = Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf->new_from_file ($filename); $image->set_from_pixbuf ($pixbuf); }; if ($@) { print "$@\n"; if (Glib::Error::matches ($@, 'Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf::Error', 'unknown-format')) { change_format_and_try_again (); } elsif (Glib::Error::matches ($@, 'Glib::File::Error', 'noent')) { change_source_dir_and_try_again (); } else { # don't know how to handle this die $@; } }
Gtk2-Perl translates GLib's GError runtime errors into Perl exceptions, by creating exception objects based on Glib::Error. Glib::Error overloads the stringification operator, so a Glib::Error object will act like a string if used with print() or warn(), so most code using $@ will not even know the difference.
The point of having exception objects, however, is that the error messages in GErrors are often localized with NLS translation. Thus, it's not good for your code to attempt to handle errors by string matching on the the error message. Glib::Error provides a way to get to the deterministic error code.
You will typically deal with objects that inherit from Glib::Error, such as Glib::Convert::Error, Glib::File::Error, Gtk2::Gdk::Pixbuf::Error, etc; these classes are provided by the libraries that define the error domains. However, it is possible to get a base Glib::Error when the bindings encounter an unknown or unbound error domain. The interface used here degrades nicely in such a situation, but in general you should submit a bug report to the binding maintainer if you get such an exception.
Glib::Boxed +----Glib::Error
Create a new exception object of type $class, where $class is associated with a GError domain. $code should be a value from the enumeration type associated with this error domain. $message can be anything you like, but should explain what happened from the point of view of a user.
This is the numeric error code. Normally, you'll want to use "value" instead, for readability.
The error domain. You normally do not need this, as the object will be blessed into a corresponding class.
The source line and file closest to the emission of the exception, in the same format that you'd get from croak() or die().
If there's non-ascii characters in the filename Perl leaves them as raw bytes, so you may have to put the string through Glib::filename_display_name for a wide-char form.
Returns true if the exception in $error matches the given $domain and $code. $domain may be a class name or domain quark (that is, the real string used in C). $code may be an integer value or an enum nickname; the enum type depends on the value of $domain.
The error message. This may be localized, as it is intended to be shown to a user.
Register a new error domain. Glib::Error will be added @package::ISA for you. enum_package must be a valid Glib::Enum type, either from a C library or registered with "Glib::Type::register_enum". After registering an error domain, you can create or throw exceptions of this type.
Throw an exception with a Glib::Error exception object. Equivalent to "croak (Glib::Error::new ($class, $code, $message));".
The enumeration value nickname of the integer value in "$error->code", according to this error domain. This will not be available if the error object is a base Glib::Error, because the bindings will have no idea how to get to the correct nickname.
Glib, Glib::Boxed
Copyright (C) 2003-2011 by the gtk2-perl team.
This software is licensed under the LGPL. See Glib for a full notice.
2022-10-19 | perl v5.36.0 |