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While using Edebug, you can specify breakpoints in the program you are testing: these are places where execution should stop. You can set a breakpoint at any stop point, as defined in Using Edebug. For setting and unsetting breakpoints, the stop point that is affected is the first one at or after point in the source code buffer. Here are the Edebug commands for breakpoints:
Set a breakpoint at the stop point at or after point
(edebug-set-breakpoint). If you use a prefix
argument, the breakpoint is temporary—it turns off the
first time it stops the program.
Unset the breakpoint (if any) at the stop point at or
after point (edebug-unset-breakpoint).
Set a conditional breakpoint which stops the program only
if evaluating condition produces a
non-nil value
(edebug-set-conditional-breakpoint). With a
prefix argument, the breakpoint is temporary.
Move point to the next breakpoint in the current
definition (edebug-next-breakpoint).
While in Edebug, you can set a breakpoint with b and unset one with u. First move point to the Edebug stop point of your choice, then type b or u to set or unset a breakpoint there. Unsetting a breakpoint where none has been set has no effect.
Re-evaluating or reinstrumenting a definition removes all of its previous breakpoints.
A conditional breakpoint tests a condition each time
the program gets there. Any errors that occur as a result of
evaluating the condition are ignored, as if the result were
nil. To set a conditional breakpoint, use
x, and specify the condition expression in the
minibuffer. Setting a conditional breakpoint at a stop point that
has a previously established conditional breakpoint puts the
previous condition expression in the minibuffer so you can edit
it.
You can make a conditional or unconditional breakpoint temporary by using a prefix argument with the command to set the breakpoint. When a temporary breakpoint stops the program, it is automatically unset.
Edebug always stops or pauses at a breakpoint, except when the Edebug mode is Go-nonstop. In that mode, it ignores breakpoints entirely.
To find out where your breakpoints are, use the B command, which moves point to the next breakpoint following point, within the same function, or to the first breakpoint if there are no following breakpoints. This command does not continue execution—it just moves point in the buffer.
Next: Global Break Condition, Up: Breaks [Contents][Index]