$Revision$
$Date$
errorcode — An error code
errorcode ::= (#PCDATA|replaceable
|inlinegraphic
|inlinemediaobject
|indexterm
|beginpage
)*
Name |
Type |
Default |
|||
moreinfo |
|
"none" |
An error code. Error codes are often numeric, but in some environments they may be symbolic constants.
DocBook provides four elements for identifying the parts of an error message:
ErrorCode
, for the alphanumeric error code (e.g., “-2”);
ErrorName
, for the symbolic name of the error
(e.g., “ENOENT”);
ErrorText
, for the text of the error message (e.g., “file
not found”); and
ErrorType
, for the error type (e.g., “recoverable”).
Formatted inline. The MoreInfo
attribute
can help generate a link or query to retrieve additional information.
These elements contain errorcode:
action
, application
, attribution
, bibliomisc
, bridgehead
, citation
, citetitle
, classsynopsisinfo
, code
, command
, computeroutput
, database
, emphasis
, entry
, filename
, firstterm
, foreignphrase
, funcparams
, funcsynopsisinfo
, function
, glosssee
, glossseealso
, glossterm
, hardware
, interfacename
, keycap
, lineannotation
, link
, literal
, literallayout
, lotentry
, member
, msgaud
, olink
, option
, optional
, para
, parameter
, phrase
, primary
, primaryie
, productname
, programlisting
, property
, quote
, refdescriptor
, refentrytitle
, refname
, refpurpose
, remark
, screen
, screeninfo
, secondary
, secondaryie
, see
, seealso
, seealsoie
, seeie
, seg
, segtitle
, simpara
, subtitle
, synopsis
, systemitem
, td
, term
, termdef
, tertiary
, tertiaryie
, th
, title
, titleabbrev
, tocback
, tocentry
, tocfront
, trademark
, ulink
, userinput
.
The following elements occur in errorcode:
beginpage
, indexterm
, inlinegraphic
, inlinemediaobject
, replaceable
.
<!DOCTYPE para PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN" "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd"> <para> On most DOS-derived systems, functions signal a <errortext>File Not Found</errortext> error by returning <errorcode>2</errorcode> (<errorname>ENOENT</errorname>). This is usually a <errortype>recoverable</errortype> (non-fatal) error. </para>
On most DOS-derived systems, functions signal a File Not Found error by returning 2 (ENOENT). This is usually a recoverable (non-fatal) error.
<!DOCTYPE para PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN" "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd"> <para> On most UNIX systems, functions signal a <errorname>File Not Found</errorname> error by returning <errorcode>ENOENT</errorcode>, defined in <filename>errno.h</filename>. This is usually a <errortype>recoverable</errortype> (non-fatal) error. </para>
On most UNIX systems, functions signal a File
Not Found error by returning
ENOENT, defined in
errno.h
. This is usually a
recoverable (non-fatal) error.