cnd_message | R Documentation |
cnd_message()
assembles an error message from three generics:
cnd_header()
cnd_body()
cnd_footer()
Methods for these generics must return a character vector. The
elements are combined into a single string with a newline
separator. Bullets syntax is supported, either through rlang (see
format_error_bullets()
), or through cli if the condition has
use_cli_format
set to TRUE
.
The default method for the error header returns the message
field
of the condition object. The default methods for the body and
footer return the the body
and footer
fields if any, or empty
character vectors otherwise.
cnd_message()
is automatically called by the conditionMessage()
for rlang errors, warnings, and messages. Error classes created
with abort()
only need to implement header, body or footer
methods. This provides a lot of flexibility for hierarchies of
error classes, for instance you could inherit the body of an error
message from a parent class while overriding the header and footer.
cnd_message(cnd, ..., inherit = TRUE, prefix = FALSE)
cnd_header(cnd, ...)
cnd_body(cnd, ...)
cnd_footer(cnd, ...)
cnd |
A condition object. |
... |
Arguments passed to methods. |
inherit |
Wether to include parent messages. Parent messages
are printed with a "Caused by error:" prefix, even if |
prefix |
Whether to print the full message, including the
condition prefix ( |
Sometimes the contents of an error message depends on the state of
your checking routine. In that case, it can be tricky to lazily
generate error messages with cnd_header()
, cnd_body()
, and
cnd_footer()
: you have the choice between overspecifying your
error class hierarchies with one class per state, or replicating
the type-checking control flow within the cnd_body()
method. None
of these options are ideal.
A better option is to define header
, body
, or footer
fields
in your condition object. These can be a static string, a
lambda-formula, or a function with the same
signature as cnd_header()
, cnd_body()
, or cnd_footer()
. These
fields override the message generics and make it easy to generate
an error message tailored to the state in which the error was
constructed.
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