Resume Statement /text/sbasic/shared/Resume.xhp Resume statement

Resume Statement

Resets error information and indicates what to execute next.
Resume Statement diagram Resume [ [0] | label | Next ] 0: Resets error information and re-executes the instruction that caused the error. 0 is optional. label: Resets error information and resumes execution at the specified label of the current subroutine. Next: Resets error information and executes the instruction following the one that caused the error. Error information is built with Erl, Err and Error$ functions. Erl: Module line number where error occurs. Err: Error number. Error[$]: Error description. Using Resume to reset error information prevents the propagation of the handled condition to calling routines.

Examples:

Typical error handling routines are: alerting the user, fixing the error, logging error information or re-throwing custom errors that provide explanations with resolution instructions. Use Resume label when requiring such mechanisms. Sub Error_Handling try: On Error GoTo catch ' routine code goes here Error 91 ' example error finally: ' routine cleanup code goes here Exit Sub catch: Print Erl, Err, Error$ Resume finally End Sub ' Error_Handling Use Resume Next, for example, when reporting anomalies encountered for an iterating process that must not be interrupted. In which case multiple handling routines may be required. Sub Iteration planets = Array("☿","♀","♁","♂","♃","♄","⛢","♆") try: On Error GoTo ReportAndProcessNext For ndx = -3 To 11 Step 1 MsgBox planets(ndx) Next On Error GoTo 0 ' Stop error catching finally: Exit Sub ReportAndProcessNext: Print "Error "& Err &" at line "& Erl &" - "& Error$ Resume Next End Sub ' Iteration Using Resume without parameters to re-execute the faulty instruction can fit certain situations. However that may cause a never ending loop.