The Conditions System of Common Lisp is something I have not grokked
yet. I had a look at some examples and tutorials, but they usually
involved too much information and code, more than I thought is
neccessary for “simple” things. Sometimes in OpenMCL, when
an error occurs it gives you the chance to assign/change a value or
define a function and continue. But the debuggers in SBCL and CMUCL
never offered such restarts. Because I knew OpenMCL can do it, and that
capability ist often praised in Common Lisp, I thought it is
“simple”. But the Condition System tutorials were always
complex, using CLOS, creating new classes with :keywords and such, not
just one, two functions/macros to remember and if one needs more one
checks the manual.
So I was very happy when I found Joel R. Holvecks Usenet Post Re:
Debugging Lisp code (stupid newbie question). He explains exactly
what I want, getting an error, fix it, and restart from a frame rather
than using one of the default restarts (abort). No CLOS, just a macro
and a special operator,
RESTART-CASE
and
UNWIND-PROTECT.
"debugging lisp"
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