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You can cause the debugger to be called at a certain point in
your program by writing the expression (debug) at
that point. To do this, visit the source file, insert the text
‘(debug)’ at the proper place, and type
C-M-x (eval-defun, a Lisp mode key
binding). Warning: if you do this for temporary
debugging purposes, be sure to undo this insertion before you
save the file!
The place where you insert ‘(debug)’
must be a place where an additional form can be evaluated and its
value ignored. (If the value of (debug) isn’t
ignored, it will alter the execution of the program!) The most
common suitable places are inside a progn or an
implicit progn (see Sequencing).
If you don’t know exactly where in the source code you
want to put the debug statement, but you want to display a
backtrace when a certain message is displayed, you can set
debug-on-message to a regular expression matching
the desired message.