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
(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
file. With a \var{function} argument, set a break at the entry of
that function. Without argument, list all breaks.
If a second argument is present, it is a string specifying an
expression which must evaluate to true before the breakpoint is
honored.
If a second argument is present, it is a string (included in string
quotes!) specifying an expression which must evaluate to true before
the breakpoint is honored.
\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
(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
file. With a \var{function} argument, set a break at the entry of
that function. Without argument, list all breaks.
If a second argument is present, it is a string specifying an
expression which must evaluate to true before the breakpoint is
honored.
If a second argument is present, it is a string (included in string
quotes!) specifying an expression which must evaluate to true before
the breakpoint is honored.
\item[cl(ear) [\var{lineno}]]