Oops, some clarifications to conditional breaks.

This commit is contained in:
Guido van Rossum 1997-07-11 13:57:28 +00:00
parent 255d790077
commit 31cbc846ac
2 changed files with 8 additions and 8 deletions

View file

@ -162,14 +162,14 @@ Move the current frame one level down in the stack trace
Move the current frame one level up in the stack trace Move the current frame one level up in the stack trace
(to a newer frame). (to a newer frame).
\item[b(reak) [\var{lineno}\code{|}\var{function}] [, "condition"]] \item[b(reak) [\var{lineno}\code{|}\var{function}] [, "\var{condition}"]]
With a \var{lineno} argument, set a break there in the current With a \var{lineno} argument, set a break there in the current
file. With a \var{function} argument, set a break at the entry of file. With a \var{function} argument, set a break at the entry of
that function. Without argument, list all breaks. that function. Without argument, list all breaks.
If a second argument is present, it is a string specifying an If a second argument is present, it is a string (included in string
expression which must evaluate to true before the breakpoint is quotes!) specifying an expression which must evaluate to true before
honored. the breakpoint is honored.
\item[cl(ear) [\var{lineno}]] \item[cl(ear) [\var{lineno}]]

View file

@ -162,14 +162,14 @@ Move the current frame one level down in the stack trace
Move the current frame one level up in the stack trace Move the current frame one level up in the stack trace
(to a newer frame). (to a newer frame).
\item[b(reak) [\var{lineno}\code{|}\var{function}] [, "condition"]] \item[b(reak) [\var{lineno}\code{|}\var{function}] [, "\var{condition}"]]
With a \var{lineno} argument, set a break there in the current With a \var{lineno} argument, set a break there in the current
file. With a \var{function} argument, set a break at the entry of file. With a \var{function} argument, set a break at the entry of
that function. Without argument, list all breaks. that function. Without argument, list all breaks.
If a second argument is present, it is a string specifying an If a second argument is present, it is a string (included in string
expression which must evaluate to true before the breakpoint is quotes!) specifying an expression which must evaluate to true before
honored. the breakpoint is honored.
\item[cl(ear) [\var{lineno}]] \item[cl(ear) [\var{lineno}]]