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3.4 Using GSL error reporting in your own functions
If you are writing numerical functions in a program which also uses GSL code you may find it convenient to adopt the same error reporting conventions as in the library.
To report an error you need to call the function gsl_error
with a
string describing the error and then return an appropriate error code
from gsl_errno.h
, or a special value, such as NaN
. For
convenience the file ‘gsl_errno.h’ defines two macros which carry
out these steps:
- Macro: GSL_ERROR (reason, gsl_errno)
This macro reports an error using the GSL conventions and returns a status value of
gsl_errno
. It expands to the following code fragment,gsl_error (reason, __FILE__, __LINE__, gsl_errno); return gsl_errno;
The macro definition in ‘gsl_errno.h’ actually wraps the code in a
do { ... } while (0)
block to prevent possible parsing problems.
Here is an example of how the macro could be used to report that a
routine did not achieve a requested tolerance. To report the error the
routine needs to return the error code GSL_ETOL
.
if (residual > tolerance) { GSL_ERROR("residual exceeds tolerance", GSL_ETOL); } |
- Macro: GSL_ERROR_VAL (reason, gsl_errno, value)
This macro is the same as
GSL_ERROR
but returns a user-defined value of value instead of an error code. It can be used for mathematical functions that return a floating point value.
The following example shows how to return a NaN
at a mathematical
singularity using the GSL_ERROR_VAL
macro,
if (x == 0) { GSL_ERROR_VAL("argument lies on singularity", GSL_ERANGE, GSL_NAN); } |