LSL エラー

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Revision as of 23:17, 11 December 2007 by March Korda (talk | contribs)
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Run-time error messages

スクリプトは実行中に停止し、以下のようなメッセージと共に"Script run-time error"をあなたに伝えるかもしれません。 such as:

Script run-time error: Heap Error

無意味な事をしないでください。例えば、結果を返さないルーチンでリスト型を返さないでください。

Script run-time error: Lists may not contain lists

リスト内にリストを入れることはできません。

Script run-time error: Math Error

Float型の数値を0で割ろうとした、integer型の数値を0で割ろうとした、等。

Script run-time error: Stack-Heap Collision

スタック領域がバイトコード領域やヒープ領域に衝突した。

それぞれのスクリプトは、16キロバイトに分割されたメモリ内で実行されます。そのメモリはバイトコード領域、スタック領域、ヒープ領域に分割されています。

あなたが長すぎるスクリプトを書いてコンパイルすると、大きすぎるバイトコードが生成され、衝突が発生します。 スクリプトがコンパイルできてセーブに成功したとしても、スクリプトを含んだオブジェクトを rez しようとすると、スクリプトはすぐに、あるいは実行中にクラッシュします。

See llGetFreeMemory.

Run-time error demo scripts

ランタイム・エラーを経験するために、以下の例のコンパイルして実行してください。

default
{
    state_entry()
    {
        llOwnerSay((string) [llOwnerSay("bye")]); // Script run-time error: Heap Error
    }
}
default
{
    state_entry()
    {
        list once = [];
        list twice = [once, once]; // Script run-time error: Lists may not contain lists
    }
}
default
{
    state_entry()
    {
        float one = 1.0;
        float zero = 0.0;
        float quotient = one / zero; // Script run-time error: Math Error
        llOwnerSay((string) quotient);
    }
}
default
{
    state_entry()
    {
        list entries = [0];
        while (TRUE)
        {
            entries += entries; // Script run-time error: Stack-Heap Collision
            llOwnerSay((string) llGetListLength(entries));
        }
    }
}

Compile-time error messages

The SL GUI may reject some code that you feel is perfectly clear, printing ERROR at you and then explaining with some further complaint.

ERROR : Type mismatch

You must name the .x .y .z .s components of a vector or rotation that you're assigning, you can't assign them all at once from a list, for instance:

default
{
    state_entry()
    {
        vector vec = (vector) [1, 2, 3]; // ERROR : Type mismatch
        llOwnerSay((string) vec);
    }
}

ERROR : Byte code assembly failed -- out of memory

You must make each script reasonably small.

For example, the compiler says you typed too much script if you cascade too many else-if's:

demoElseIfCompileError(integer count)
{
    if (count == 0)
    {
        ;
    }
    else if (count == 1)
    {
        ;
    }
    else if (count == 2)
    {
        ;
    }
    ...
    ... // ERROR : Byte code assembly failed -- out of memory
    ... // or ERROR : Syntax error
    ...
    else if (count == ...)
    {
        ;
    }
}

How much script is too much script can vary astonishingly. For example, the 2007-08 Second Life clients varied as much as 30X, from one to the next. Specifically, the Windows client accepted 22 else-if's and refused 23 else-if's, while Mac OS X was accepting 692 else-if's and refusing 693 else-if's.

Compilation limits that vary by operating system in effect work as a copy-restriction mechanism. Any resident can run the script compiled by the less limited compiler, but residents who have only the more limited compiler cannot save changes to the source.

See llGetFreeMemory, llMessageLinked.

ERROR : Syntax error

You must punctuate the script and spell the words of the script as will please the compiler, of course.

Also you must make each script reasonably small. The compiler may astonishingly complain of a "syntax" error rather than politely complaining more specifically of an "out of memory" "byte code assembly failed" error, when you make a script unreasonably large.

For example, the 2007-08 Windows Second Life client complained of a Syntax error if you cascaded too many else-if's. The exact limits enforced can vary astonishingly. For example, the 2007-08 Windows Second Life client sometimes accepted as many as 22 cascaded else-if's, but also sometimes rejected as few as 19 cascaded else-if's, depending on other details of the script.

Programmers who learned LSL on one compiler may feel that that compiler's limits are reasonable, e.g., up to five hundred cascaded else-if's in Mac OS X, while programmers trained on another compiler may feel instead that only its significantly different limits are reasonable, e.g., no more than a dozen cascaded else-if's in Windows.