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    ⚠️ Important | Libfredo 15.6b introduces important bugfixes for Fredo's Extensions Update

    Rescue Exception

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    • Dan RathbunD Offline
      Dan Rathbun
      last edited by

      @dan rathbun said:

      So in the VisTools updates I am working on, I will need to change all the rescue clauses ...

      Well I did make these changes in the v1.3.0 release.

      All the rescue clauses look similar to this now:

      rescue => e
        #
        unless $VERBOSE.nil? # not in silent mode
          puts("\nVisTools; Error encountered in 'isolate_entities' ; Aborting Model Operation.")
          puts("Error; #<#{e.class.name}; #{e.message}>") if @@debug
          puts(e.backtrace) if @@debug && $VERBOSE
          puts()
        end
        Sketchup.active_model.abort_operation
        raise
        #
      end
      

      I realized in this case, what I primarily wanted to do in the rescue clause, was abort the operation.

      So after doing that, I just re-raise the exception, so any debugger or development toolkit can see it.

      πŸ’­

      I'm not here much anymore.

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      • thomthomT Offline
        thomthom
        last edited by

        @dan rathbun said:

        So after doing that, I just re-raise the exception, so any debugger or development toolkit can see it.

        I find that pattern useful myself.

        Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
        List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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        • Dan RathbunD Offline
          Dan Rathbun
          last edited by

          @thomthom said:

          @dan rathbun said:

          So after doing that, I just re-raise the exception, so any debugger or development toolkit can see it.

          I find that pattern useful myself.

          Yes, when we stop, and think a bit,... we should realize that exceptions may not be coming from OUR code, but from other author's code using observers, that may be triggered by our code.

          If we swallow these exceptions at OUR point in the callstack, it could lead to a very frustrating debugging session.

          I did test a few of the StandardError subclases (using my Error raising scriptlets for testing,) and it seems that SketchUp protectively wraps API calls.

          I'm not here much anymore.

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          • J Offline
            Jim
            last edited by

            @dan rathbun said:

            If we swallow these exceptions at OUR point in the callstack, it could lead to a very frustrating debugging session.

            I suspect this is currently happening and is what prompted the original topic. This and weird things like:

            2012-12-01_182255.png

            ❓

            Hi

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            • Dan RathbunD Offline
              Dan Rathbun
              last edited by

              @jim said:

              ... and weird things like:

              Looks like Fredo could be overriding Enumerable.each_with_index() or the inherited method in the IO class (or it's subclass File) ??

              I'm not here much anymore.

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              • thomthomT Offline
                thomthom
                last edited by

                Is it not FredoPaint? It uses observers to hook into material events.

                Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                • fredo6F Offline
                  fredo6
                  last edited by

                  @dan rathbun said:

                  @jim said:

                  ... and weird things like:

                  Looks like Fredo could be overriding Enumerable.each_with_index() or the inherited method in the IO class (or it's subclass File) ??

                  Dan,

                  My scripts do not subclass any standard Ruby class.
                  I think the errors shown in Lib6Traductor.rb comes from the fact that in my utilities to convert strings to length, I use a technique to deliberately provoke an error within a begin / rescue clause in order to find out which locale convention Sketchup is configured for length parsing (basically by testing if "2.3".to_l is valid versus "2,3".to_l).

                  Fredo

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                  • Dan RathbunD Offline
                    Dan Rathbun
                    last edited by

                    @unknownuser said:

                    My scripts do not subclass any standard Ruby class.

                    It is OK to subclass standard Ruby classes, within your own modules, but not allowed to change standard classes for only your use.

                    @unknownuser said:

                    I think the errors ... comes from the fact that ... I use a technique to deliberately provoke an error within a begin / rescue clause in order to find out which locale convention Sketchup is configured ...

                    OK ... yes I had also done that in several plugins.. and the most recent was VisTools < v1.3.0, so up untilv1.2.1 I was doing this:

                    OLD WAY:

                    #{ Load localized string hashes from file;
                    @@lang = Sketchup.get_locale()[0,2] unless defined?(@@lang)
                    begin
                      if @@lang == 'en'
                        raise(LoadError,"English")
                      else
                        load(File.join(BASEPATH,"VisTools_"<<@@lang<<".rb"))
                      end
                    rescue LoadError => e
                      if e.message != 'English' && !$VERBOSE.nil?
                        puts()
                        puts('NOTICE; Could not find a "VisTools_'<<@@lang<<'.rb" file to load.')
                        puts('Using English text for VisTools plugin UI.')
                        puts()
                      end
                      @@menutext = Hash[
                        ;plugin_name,      "VisTools",
                        #
                        ;hide_layers,      "Hide Layers",
                        ;isolate_layers,   "Isolate Layers",
                        ;hide_entities,    "Hide Entities",
                        ;isolate_entities, "Isolate Entities",
                        ;freeze_entities,  "Freeze Groups/Components",
                        ;unfreeze_all,     "Unfreeze All",
                        ;show_all,         "Show All",
                        #
                        ;debug_mode, "Debug Mode"
                      ]
                      @@tooltips = Hash[
                        ;hide_layers,      "Hide selected layers",
                        ;isolate_layers,   "Isolate selected layers",
                        ;hide_entities,    "Hide selected entities",
                        ;isolate_entities, "Isolate selected entities",
                        ;freeze_entities,  "Freeze groups and components",
                        ;unfreeze_all,     "Unfreeze all",
                        ;show_all,         "Show all layers and entities"
                      ]
                    end #}
                    
                    

                    THEN ... I read the Ruby Style Guide and realized that for various reasons ... using an exception as a conditional / branching construct is VERY BAD CODING STYLE and confusing to anyone reading or debugging the code!

                    So I revised that code block, so it now looks like this in v1.3.0+:

                    #{ String hashes;
                    @@lang = Sketchup.get_locale()[0,2] unless defined?(@@lang)
                    unless @@lang == 'en'
                      # Load localized string hashes from file;
                      begin
                        load(File.join(BASEPATH,"VisTools_"<<@@lang<<".rb"))
                      rescue LoadError => e
                        unless $VERBOSE.nil?
                          puts()
                          puts('NOTICE; Could not find a "VisTools_'<<@@lang<<'.rb" file to load.')
                          puts('Using English text for VisTools plugin UI.')
                          puts()
                        end
                        @@lang == 'en' # just use English
                      end
                    end # load attempt
                    #
                    if @@lang == 'en'
                      @@menutext = Hash[
                        ;plugin_name,      "VisTools",
                        #
                        ;hide_layers,      "Hide Layers",
                        ;isolate_layers,   "Isolate Layers",
                        ;hide_entities,    "Hide Entities",
                        ;isolate_entities, "Isolate Entities",
                        ;freeze_entities,  "Freeze Groups/Components",
                        ;unfreeze_all,     "Unfreeze All",
                        ;show_all,         "Show All",
                        #
                        ;debug_mode, "Debug Mode"
                      ]
                      @@tooltips = Hash[
                        ;hide_layers,      "Hide selected layers",
                        ;isolate_layers,   "Isolate selected layers",
                        ;hide_entities,    "Hide selected entities",
                        ;isolate_entities, "Isolate selected entities",
                        ;freeze_entities,  "Freeze groups and components",
                        ;unfreeze_all,     "Unfreeze all",
                        ;show_all,         "Show all layers and entities"
                      ]
                    end #}
                    
                    

                    It should work the same, but not misuse (ie, raise any unneeded) exceptions.

                    However, a chinese user has just posted an error where it is not working quite correct yet.
                    English should be used, but the user is getting a LoadError... (see the error post).

                    πŸ’­

                    I'm not here much anymore.

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                    • fredo6F Offline
                      fredo6
                      last edited by

                      Dan,

                      Thanks for your comments

                      1. I mean my scripts do not alter in anyway the standard Ruby classes and the Sketchup classes too.

                      2. The dot / comma interpretation in Sketchup based on the locale was beyond my understanding and knowledge, so I used this quick way to check whether dot or comma is the decimal separator. I can imagine there will be an API for that in future SU versions.

                      Fredo

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                      • thomthomT Offline
                        thomthom
                        last edited by

                        @unknownuser said:

                        1. The dot / comma interpretation in Sketchup based on the locale was beyond my understanding and knowledge, so I used this quick way to check whether dot or comma is the decimal separator. I can imagine there will be an API for that in future SU versions.

                        I hope so. I've yet to find another way to "detect" the decimal point within SU's Ruby API.

                        Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                        List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                        • Dan RathbunD Offline
                          Dan Rathbun
                          last edited by

                          OK I understand ...

                          Visual Basic:

                          CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.NumberFormat.NumberDecimalSeparator
                          

                          I'm not here much anymore.

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